KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT
497, 1995-09-20
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<PAGE>   1

                             KEMPER ADVANTAGE III
                           PROSPECTUS - MAY 1, 1995


THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL OR A SOLICITATION OF AN
OFFER TO BUY SECURITIES IN ANY STATE, TO ANY PERSON, TO WHOM IT IS NOT LAWFUL
TO MAKE SUCH AN OFFER IN SUCH STATE. A FIXED AND VARIABLE ANNUITY ISSUED BY
KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY.
<PAGE>   2
 
                            PROSPECTUS--MAY 1, 1995
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                PERIODIC PAYMENT
 
                           VARIABLE ANNUITY CONTRACTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                   ISSUED BY

                    KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY

                               IN CONNECTION WITH

                    KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT

   HOME OFFICE: 1 KEMPER DRIVE, LONG GROVE, ILLINOIS 60049     (708) 320-4500
 
The types of Periodic Payment Deferred Variable Annuity Contracts ("Periodic
Payment Contract" or "Contracts") offered by this Prospectus are issued by
Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company ("KILICO") and are designed to provide
annuity benefits under retirement plans which may or may not qualify for the
Federal tax advantages available under Section 401, 403, 408 or 457 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
 
Purchase payments for the Contracts may be allocated to one or more of the
investment options under which Contract values accumulate on either a variable
or fixed basis. These options consist of the seven Subaccounts of the Separate
Account and the Fixed Accumulation Option of the General Account. Each
Subaccount invests in one of the portfolios of the Kemper Investors Fund (the
"Fund") which is managed by Kemper Financial Services, Inc. ("KFS"). The Fund
currently consists of the following Portfolios: Money Market, Total Return, High
Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and Small Capitalization
Equity ("Small Cap"). Subaccounts and Portfolios may be added in the future.
Contract values allocated to any of the Subaccounts will vary to reflect the
investment performance of the corresponding Portfolio. The accompanying
Prospectus for the Fund describes the investment objectives and the attendant
risks of the Portfolios of the Fund. Contract values allocated to the Fixed
Accumulation Option will accumulate on a fixed basis.
 
This Prospectus is designed to provide you with certain essential information
that you should know before investing. A Statement of Additional Information
dated May 1, 1995 has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission and
is incorporated herein by reference. A Statement of Additional Information is
available upon request from KILICO by writing or calling the address or
telephone number listed above. A table of contents for the Statement of
Additional Information is on page 25 of this Prospectus.
 
THIS PROSPECTUS IS VALID ONLY IF ACCOMPANIED OR PRECEDED BY A CURRENT PROSPECTUS
FOR THE KEMPER INVESTORS FUND. ALL PROSPECTUSES SHOULD BE READ AND RETAINED FOR
FUTURE REFERENCE.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR HAS THE COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY
OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
<PAGE>   3
 
TABLE OF CONTENTS
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            Page
                                                                                            -----
<S>                                                                                         <C>
DEFINITIONS.................................................................................     1
SUMMARY.....................................................................................     2
SUMMARY OF EXPENSES.........................................................................     4
CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION.............................................................     5
KILICO, THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT AND THE FUND...................................................     7
FIXED ACCUMULATION OPTION...................................................................    10
THE CONTRACTS...............................................................................    10
CONTRACT CHARGES AND EXPENSES...............................................................    14
THE ANNUITY PERIOD..........................................................................    16
FEDERAL INCOME TAXES........................................................................    19
DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACTS...................................................................    22
VOTING RIGHTS...............................................................................    22
REPORTS TO CONTRACT OWNERS AND INQUIRIES....................................................    22
DOLLAR COST AVERAGING.......................................................................    23
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN..................................................................    23
PROVISIONS OF PRIOR CONTRACTS...............................................................    23
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS...........................................................................    25
TABLE OF CONTENTS--STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION......................................    25
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   4
 
DEFINITIONS
 
The following terms as used in this Prospectus have the indicated meanings:
 
     ACCUMULATION PERIOD--The period between the Date of Issue of a Contract and
     the Annuity Date.
 
     ACCUMULATION UNIT--A unit of measurement used to determine the value of
     each Subaccount during the Accumulation Period.
 
     ANNUITANT--The person designated to receive or who is actually receiving
     annuity payments and upon the continuation of whose life annuity payments
     involving life contingencies depend.
 
     ANNUITY DATE--The date on which annuity payments are to commence.
 
     ANNUITY OPTION--One of several forms in which annuity payments can be made.
 
     ANNUITY PERIOD--The period starting on the Annuity Date.
 
     ANNUITY UNIT--A unit of measurement used to determine the amount of
     Variable Annuity payments.
 
     BENEFICIARY--The person designated to receive any benefits under a Contract
     upon the death of the Annuitant or the Owner prior to the Annuity Period.
 
     CONTRACT--A Variable Annuity Contract offered by this Prospectus. With
     respect to a Contract issued on a group basis, the certificate issued to an
     individual shall be deemed for the purposes of this Prospectus to be a
     Contract.
 
     CONTRACT OWNER OR OWNER--The person designated in the Contract as having
     the privileges of ownership defined in the Contract.
 
     CONTRACT VALUE--The sum of the values of the Owner's Contract interest in
     the Subaccount(s) of the Separate Account and the General Account.
 
     CONTRACT YEAR--Period between anniversaries of the Date of Issue of a
     Contract, or with respect to a Contract issued on a group basis, the period
     between anniversaries of the date of issue of a certificate.
 
     CONTRACT QUARTER--Periods between quarterly anniversaries of the Date of
     Issue of the Contract, or with respect to a Contract issued on a group
     basis, the period between quarterly anniversaries of the date of issue of a
     certificate.
 
     CONTRIBUTION YEAR--Each Contract Year in which a Purchase Payment is made
     and each succeeding year measured from the end of the Contract Year during
     which such Purchase Payment was made. For example, if a Contract Owner
     makes an initial payment of $15,000 and then makes a subsequent payment of
     $10,000 during the fourth Contract Year, the fifth Contract Year will be
     the fifth Contribution Year for the purpose of Accumulation Units
     attributable to the initial payment and the second Contribution Year with
     respect to Accumulation Units attributable to the subsequent $10,000
     payment.
 
     DATE OF ISSUE--The date on which the first Contract Year commences.
 
     DEBT--The principal of any outstanding loan from the General Account
     Contract Value, plus any accrued interest. Requests for loans must be made
     in writing to KILICO.
 
     FIXED ANNUITY--An annuity under which the amount of each annuity payment
     does not vary with the investment experience of a Subaccount and is
     guaranteed by KILICO.
 
     FUND--The Kemper Investors Fund, an open-end management investment company
     consisting of seven portfolios in which the Separate Account invests.
 
     GENERAL ACCOUNT--All the assets of KILICO other than those allocated to any
     Separate Account. KILICO guarantees a minimum rate of interest on Purchase
     Payments allocated to the General Account.
 
     GENERAL ACCOUNT CONTRACT VALUE--The value of the Owner's Contract interest
     in the General Account.
 
     KILICO--Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company, whose Home Office is at 1
     Kemper Drive, Long Grove, Illinois 60049.
 
     NON-QUALIFIED PLAN CONTRACT--A Contract issued in connection with a
     retirement plan which does not receive favorable tax treatment under
     Section 401, 403, 408 or 457 of the Internal Revenue Code.
 
     PURCHASE PAYMENTS--Amounts paid to KILICO by or on behalf of a Contract
     Owner.
 
     QUALIFIED PLAN CONTRACT--A Contract issued in connection with a retirement
     plan which receives favorable tax treatment under Section 401, 403, 408 or
     457 of the Internal Revenue Code.
 
                                        1
<PAGE>   5
 
     SEPARATE ACCOUNT--A unit investment trust registered with the Securities
     and Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940 known as
     the KILICO Variable Annuity Separate Account.
 
     SEPARATE ACCOUNT CONTRACT VALUE--The sum of the Owner's Contract interest
     in the Subaccount(s).
 
     SUBACCOUNTS--The seven subdivisions of the Separate Account, the assets of
     which consist solely of shares of the corresponding portfolio of the Fund.
 
     SUBACCOUNT VALUE--The value of the Owner's Contract interest in each
     Subaccount.
 
     UNITHOLDER--The person holding the voting rights with respect to an
     Accumulation or Annuity Unit.
 
     VALUATION DATE--Each day when the New York Stock Exchange is open for
     trading, as well as each day otherwise required. (See "Accumulation Unit
     Value.")
 
     VALUATION PERIOD--The interval of time between two consecutive Valuation
     Dates.
 
     VARIABLE ANNUITY--An annuity with payments varying in amount in accordance
     with the investment experience of the Subaccount(s) in which the Owner's
     Contract has an interest.
 
     WITHDRAWAL CHARGE--The "contingent deferred sales charge" assessed against
     certain withdrawals of Accumulation Units in their first six Contribution
     Years or against certain annuitization of Accumulation Units in their first
     six Contribution Years.
 
     WITHDRAWAL VALUE--Contract Value less Debt, and any premium tax payable if
     the Contract is being annuitized, minus any Withdrawal Charge applicable to
     that Contract.
 
                                    SUMMARY
 
The Contracts described in the Prospectus provide a way to invest on a
tax-deferred basis and to receive annuity benefits in accordance with the
annuity option selected and the retirement plan under which the Contract has
been purchased. The Prospectus offers both Non-Qualified Plan and Qualified Plan
Contracts. KILICO makes several underlying investment options, including seven
variable Subaccounts and a Fixed Accumulation Option, available for the Contract
Owner to pursue his or her investment objectives.
 
The minimum initial Purchase Payment for a Non-Qualified Plan Contract is $2,500
and the minimum subsequent payment is $500. The minimum Purchase Payment for a
Qualified Plan Contract is $50. However, so long as annualized contribution
amounts from a payroll or salary deduction plan are equal to or greater than
$600, a periodic payment for a Qualified Plan Contract under $50 will be
accepted. For a Non-Qualified Plan Contract a minimum of $500 in Contract Value
must be allocated to an investment option before another investment option can
be selected. For a Qualified Plan Contract, as long as contribution amounts to a
new investment option from a payroll or salary reduction plan are equal to or
greater than $50 per month, another such investment option may be selected. The
maximum Purchase Payment for a Qualified Plan Contract is the maximum permitted
under the plan pursuant to which the Contract is issued. (See "The Contracts,"
page 10.)
 
KILICO provides for variable accumulations and benefits under the Contracts by
crediting purchase payments to one or more Subaccounts of the Separate Account
as selected by the Contract Owner. The Subaccounts invest in one of the seven
corresponding Portfolios (the "Portfolios") of the Kemper Investors Fund (the
"Fund"), a series mutual fund which is managed by KFS. The Money Market
Portfolio invests in U.S. dollar denominated money market instruments that
mature in twelve months or less. The Total Return Portfolio invests in a
combination of debt securities and common stocks. The High Yield Portfolio
invests in fixed-income securities, including lower rated and unrated securities
which may entail relatively greater risk of loss of income or principal but may
offer a current yield or yield to maturity which is higher. The Equity Portfolio
invests primarily in common stock or securities convertible into or exchangeable
for common stocks. The Government Securities Portfolio invests primarily in
direct obligations of the U.S. Treasury or obligations issued or guaranteed by
agencies and instrumentalities of the United States. The International Portfolio
invests principally in common stocks of established non-United States companies
believed to have potential for capital growth, income or both. The Small Cap
Portfolio invests primarily in the equity securities of smaller companies, i.e.,
those having a market capitalization of $1 billion or less at the time of
investment. (See "The Fund," page 7.) The Contract Values allocated to the
Separate Account will vary with the investment performance of the Portfolios
selected by the Contract Owner.
 
KILICO also provides for fixed accumulations and benefits under the Contracts in
the Fixed Accumulation Option of the General Account. Any portion of the
purchase payment allocated to the Fixed Accumulation Option is credited with
interest daily at a rate periodically declared by KILICO in its sole discretion,
but not less than 3%. (See "Fixed Accumulation Option," page 10.)
 
                                        2
<PAGE>   6
 
The investment risk under the Contracts is borne by the Contract Owner, except
to the extent that Contract Values are allocated to the Fixed Accumulation
Option and are guaranteed to earn at least 3% interest.
 
Transfers between Subaccounts are permitted before and after annuitization, if
allowed by the applicable retirement plan and subject to certain limitations.
Restrictions apply to transfers out of the Fixed Accumulation Option. (See
"Transfer During Accumulation Period" and "Transfer During Annuity Period,"
pages 12 and 17, respectively.)
 
No sales charge is deducted from any Purchase Payment. A Contract Owner may
withdraw up to 10% of the Contract Value less Debt in any Contract Year without
assessment of any charge. If the Contract Owner withdraws an amount in excess of
10% of the Contract Value less Debt in any Contract Year, the amount withdrawn
in excess of 10% is subject to a contingent deferred sales charge ("Withdrawal
Charge"). The Withdrawal Charge starts at 6% in the first Contribution Year and
reduces by 1% each Contribution Year so that there is no charge in the seventh
and later Contribution Years. (See "Withdrawal Charge," page 15.) The Withdrawal
Charge also applies at the annuitization of Accumulation Units in their sixth
Contribution Year or earlier, except as set forth under "Withdrawal Charge."
However, in no event shall the aggregate Withdrawal Charges assessed against a
Contract exceed 7.25% of the aggregate Purchase Payments made under the
Contract. Please note that adverse tax consequences may occur with respect to
certain withdrawals. (See "Tax Treatment of Withdrawals, Loans and Assignments,"
page 20.)
 
KILICO makes charges under the Contract for assuming the mortality and expense
risk and administrative expenses under the Contract, for records maintenance,
and for any applicable premium taxes. (See "Charges Against the Separate
Account," page 14.) In addition, KFS makes a charge against the assets of each
of the Portfolios for providing investment advisory services. (See the Fund
prospectus for such information).
 
The Contracts may be purchased in connection with retirement plans which qualify
either under Section 401 or 403(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended (the "Code") or as individual retirement account plans established under
Section 408 of the Code. The Contracts are also available in connection with
state and municipal deferred compensation plans and other entities qualified
under Section 457 of the Code and under other deferred compensation
arrangements, and are also offered under other retirement plans which may not
qualify for similar tax advantages. (See "Non-Qualified Plan Contracts," page 19
and "Qualified Plans," page 20.)
 
A Contract Owner has the right within the "free look" period (generally ten
days, subject to state variation) after receiving the Contract to cancel the
Contract by delivering or mailing it to KILICO. Upon receipt by KILICO, the
Contract will be cancelled and a refund will be made. The amount of the refund
will depend on the state in which the Contract is issued; however, it generally
will be an amount at least equal to the Contract Value. (See "The Contracts,"
page 10.)
 
                                        3
<PAGE>   7
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                              SUMMARY OF EXPENSES
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 CONTRACT OWNER TRANSACTION EXPENSES
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
  <S>                                                                                                              <C>
  Sales Load Imposed on Purchases (as a percentage of purchase payments).........................................   None
  Contingent Deferred Sales Load (as a percentage of amount surrendered)*
                                                              Year of Withdrawal After Purchase
                                                              ---------------------------------
                                                                 First year......................................     6%
                                                                 Second year.....................................     5%
                                                                 Third year......................................     4%
                                                                 Fourth year.....................................     3%
                                                                 Fifth year......................................     2%
                                                                 Sixth year......................................     1%
                                                                 Seventh year and following......................     0%
  Surrender Fees.................................................................................................   None
  Exchange Fee...................................................................................................   None
  ANNUAL CONTRACT FEE (Records Maintenance Charge)**.............................................................    $36
</TABLE>


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
SEPARATE ACCOUNT ANNUAL EXPENSES
(as a percentage of average daily account value)

<S>                              <C>
  Mortality and Expense Risk...   1.00%
  Administration...............    .30%
  Account Fees and Expenses....      0%
  Total Separate Account 
    Annual Expenses............   1.30%
</TABLE>


FUND ANNUAL EXPENSES
(as percentage of each Portfolio's average net assets)


<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                               MONEY         TOTAL                                    GOVERNMENT
                               MARKET        RETURN       HIGH YIELD       EQUITY     SECURITIES  INTERNATIONAL   SMALL CAP
                              PORTFOLIO     PORTFOLIO      PORTFOLIO     PORTFOLIO     PORTFOLIO    PORTFOLIO     PORTFOLIO
                              ---------     ---------     ----------     ---------     ---------    ---------     ---------
<S>                           <C>           <C>           <C>            <C>           <C>           <C>          <C>
Management Fees......            .50%           .55%           .60%          .60%          .55%          .75%         .65%
Other Expenses.......            .03            .06            .05           .06           .09           .18          .60
Total Portfolio               ------         ------         ------        ------        ------        ------       ------
  Annual Expenses....            .53%           .61%           .65%          .66%          .64%          .93%        1.25%
                              ======         ======         ======        ======        ======        ======       ======
</TABLE>

 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                    EXAMPLE
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                       
                                                                SUBACCOUNT                  1 YEAR    3 YEARS   5 YEARS   10 YEARS
                                                                ----------                  ------    -------   -------   --------
  <S>                                                          <C>                          <C>      <C>       <C>       <C>
  If you surrender your contract at the end of the applicable   Money Market                 $ 83     $ 108     $ 134     $ 239
  time period:                                                  Total Return                   84       111       138       248
    You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000            High Yield                     84       112       140       252
    investment, assuming 5% annual return on assets:            Equity                         84       112       141       253
                                                                Government Securities          84       111       139       250
                                                                International                  87       120       154       281
                                                                Small Cap                      90       130        --        --

  If you do not surrender your contract:                        Money Market                   21        65       111       239
    You would pay the following expenses                        Total Return                   22        67       115       248
    on a $1,000 investment, assuming                            High Yield                     22        69       117       252
    5% annual return on assets:                                 Equity                         22        69       118       253
                                                                Government Securities          22        68       116       250
                                                                International                  25        77       132       281
                                                                Small Cap                      28        87        --        --
                                                                                                
</TABLE>
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
The purpose of the preceding table is to assist Contract Owners in understanding
the various costs and expenses that a Contract Owner in a Subaccount will bear
directly or indirectly. The table reflects expenses of both the Separate Account
and the Fund. THE EXAMPLE SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED TO BE A REPRESENTATION OF
PAST OR FUTURE EXPENSES AND DOES NOT INCLUDE THE DEDUCTION OF STATE PREMIUM
TAXES, WHICH MAY BE ASSESSED BEFORE OR UPON ANNUITIZATION. ACTUAL EXPENSES MAY
BE GREATER OR LESS THAN THOSE SHOWN. The example assumes a 5% annual rate of
return pursuant to requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission. This
hypothetical rate of return is not intended to be representative of past or
future performance of any Subaccount. The Records Maintenance Charge is a single
charge, it is not a separate charge for each Subaccount. In addition, the effect
of the Records Maintenance Charge has been reflected by applying the percentage
derived by dividing the total amounts of annual Records Maintenance Charge
collected by the total net assets of all the Subaccounts in the Separate
Account. See "Contract Charges and Expenses" for more information regarding the
various costs and expenses.
 
 * A Contract Owner may withdraw up to 10% of the Contract Value less Debt in
   any Contract Year without assessment of any charge. Under certain
   circumstances the contingent deferred sales load may be reduced or waived,
   including when certain annuity options are selected.
 
** Under certain circumstances the annual Records Maintenance Charge may be
   reduced or waived by KILICO.
 
                                        4
<PAGE>   8

                        CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
 
The following condensed financial information is derived from the financial
statements of the Separate Account. The data should be read in conjunction with
the financial statements, related notes and other financial information included
in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
Selected data for the last ten years for accumulation units outstanding as of
the year ended December 31st for each period:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     Flexible Payment Contracts                                    
                                 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                 1994***     1993      1992**     1991      1990      1989*     1988      1987      1986      1985 
                                 ------     ------     ------     -----     -----     -----     -----     -----     -----     -----
<S>                              <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>       <C>  
TAX QUALIFIED                                                                                                                      
Accumulation unit value at                                                                                                         
 beginning of period                                                                                                               
Money Market Subaccount...      $2.051       2.014     1.966      1.875     1.751     1.621     1.523     1.443     1.367     1.277
Total Return Subaccount...       4.236       3.816     3.790      2.776     2.669     2.174     1.960     1.967     1.726     1.357
High Yield Subaccount.....       4.517       3.802     3.261      2.169     2.591     2.651     2.311     2.204     1.891     1.569
Equity Subaccount.........       3.520       3.102     3.025      1.916     1.923     1.515     1.524     1.513     1.399     1.129
Government Securities                                                                                                              
 Subaccount*..............       1.388       1.317     1.256      1.101     1.013                                                  
International                                                                                                                      
 Subaccount**.............       1.293        .983     1.000                                                                       
Accumulation unit value at                                                                                                         
 end of period                                                                                                                     
Money Market Subaccount...      $2.111       2.051     2.014      1.966     1.875     1.751     1.621     1.523     1.443     1.367
Total Return Subaccount...       3.796       4.236     3.816      3.790     2.776     2.669     2.174     1.960     1.967     1.726
High Yield Subaccount.....       4.372       4.517     3.802      3.261     2.169     2.591     2.651     2.311     2.204     1.891
Equity Subaccount.........       3.345       3.520     3.102      3.025     1.916     1.923     1.515     1.524     1.513     1.399
Government Securities                                                                                                              
 Subaccount*..............       1.337       1.388     1.317      1.256     1.101     1.013                                        
International                                                                                                                      
 Subaccount**.............       1.234       1.293      .983                                                                       
Small Cap Subaccount***...       1.033                                                                                             
Number of accumulation                                                                                                             
 units outstanding at end                                                                                                          
 of period                                                                                                                         
 (000's omitted)                                                                                                                   
Money Market Subaccount...         733         844     1,081      1,720     2,388     2,417     3,127     4,394     4,455     5,801
Total Return Subaccount...        1299       1,511     1,859      1,924     2,355     2,888     3,652     5,546     5,673     5,687
High Yield Subaccount.....         532         657       670        723       885     1,587     2,104     1,854     3,402     2,353
Equity Subaccount.........         238         222       303        255       251       578       489     1,022     1,423     1,785
Government Securities                                                                                                              
 Subaccount*..............         237         257       267        288       170       168                                        
International                                                                                                                      
 Subaccount**.............         625         284        91                                                                       
Small Cap Subaccount***...          14                                                                                             
 
<CAPTION>
                                                               Periodic Payment Contracts
                             ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             1994***      1993       1992**       1991       1990      1989*       1988       1987     1986    1985
                             -------     -------     -------     ------     ------     ------     ------     ------   ------   ----
<S>                           <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>     <C>  
TAX QUALIFIED                        
Accumulation unit value at           
 beginning of period                 
Money Market Subaccount...     1.981      1.950       1.910      1.827      1.712      1.589      1.498      1.423    1.352    1,266
Total Return Subaccount...     4.092      3.696       3.682      2.705      2.609      2.131      1.927      1.940    1.707    1,346
High Yield Subaccount.....     4.363      3.683       3.168      2.114      2.533      2.599      2.272      2.174    1.871    1,557
Equity Subaccount.........     3.417      3.020       2.954      1.876      1.889      1.492      1.506      1.500    1.390    1,126
Government Securities                
 Subaccount*..............     1.371      1.305       1.248      1.097      1.012
International                        
 Subaccount**.............     1.285       .980       1.000
Accumulation unit value at           
 end of period                       
Money Market Subaccount...     2.033      1.981       1.950      1.910      1.827      1.712      1.589      1.498    1.423    1,352
Total Return Subaccount...     3.656      4.092       3.696      3.682      2.705      2.609      2.131      1.927    1.940    1,707
High Yield Subaccount.....     4.210      4.363       3.683      3.168      2.114      2.533      2.599      2.272    2.174    1,871
Equity Subaccount.........     3.238      3.417       3.020      2.954      1.876      1.889      1.492      1.506    1.500    1,390
Government Securities                
 Subaccount*..............     1.317      1.371       1.305      1.248      1.097      1.012
International                        
 Subaccount**.............     1.223      1.285        .980
Small Cap Subaccount***...     1.031 
Number of accumulation               
 units outstanding at end            
 of period                           
 (000's omitted)                     
Money Market Subaccount...    15,997     14,891      12,605     14,973     21,581     14,185     16,953     20,296   10,799    6,774
Total Return Subaccount...   110,428    108,395     100,100     81,776     70,620     68,024     63,669     68,367   47,935   30,984
High Yield Subaccount.....    26,546     26,749      22,202     19,861     22,623     28,032     22,281     14,320   23,972    7,532
Equity Subaccount.........    58,845     50,289      42,078     28,271     22,451     19,163     17,780     17,000   10,278   13,170
Government Securities                
 Subaccount*..............    24,332     31,898      28,368     23,035     12,918      7,794
International                        
 Subaccount**.............    61,490     38,844      10,372
Small Cap Subaccount***...     8.304 

</TABLE>
                                     
(Continued on next page)


 
                                        5
<PAGE>   9
 
                  CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION (CONTINUED)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Flexible Payment Contracts
                           --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                           1994***     1993      1992**     1991       1990      1989*       1988       1987       1986       1985
                           ------     ------     -----     ------     ------     ------     ------     ------     ------     ------
<S>                        <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
NON-TAX
 QUALIFIED
Accumulation unit value at
 beginning of period
Money Market Subaccount... $2.051     $2.014     1.966      1.875      1.751      1.621      1.523      1.443      1.367      1.277
Total Return Subaccount...  3.922      3.533     3.509      2.570      2.471      2.013      1.815      1.822      1.598      1.256
High Yield Subaccount.....  4.325      3.640     3.122      2.077      2.481      2.538      2.213      2.110      1.811      1.503
Equity Subaccount.........  3.508      3.091     3.014      1.909      1.917      1.509      1.518      1.508      1.394      1.125
Government Securities
 Subaccount*..............  1.388      1.317     1.256      1.101      1.013
International
 Subaccount**.............  1.293       .983     1.000
Accumulation unit value at
 end of period
Money Market Subaccount... $2.111     $2.051     2.014      1.966      1.875      1.751      1.621      1.523      1.443      1.367
Total Return Subaccount...  3.515      3.922     3.533      3.509      2.570      2.471      2.013      1.815      1.822      1.598
High Yield Subaccount.....  4.186      4.325     3.640      3.122      2.077      2.481      2.538      2.213      2.110      1.811
Equity Subaccount.........  3.334      3.508     3.091      3.014      1.909      1.917      1.509      1.518      1.508      1.394
Government Securities
 Subaccount*..............  1.337      1.388     1.317      1.256      1.101      1.013
International
 Subaccount**.............  1.234      1.293      .983
Small Cap Subaccount***...  1.033
Number of accumulation
 units outstanding at end
 of period
 (000's omitted)
Money Market Subaccount...  6,914      7,153     8,495     11,926     15,563     19,006     22,047     28,702     36,072     56,027
Total Return Subaccount...  6,613      8,042     8,853      9,586     10,291     12,244     15,032     20,329     21,648     22,557
High Yield Subaccount.....  3,621      4,517     4,876      5,240      6,652     11,895     14,871     16,264     25,551     24,295
Equity Subaccount.........  1,370      1,671     2,032      1,773      1,955      1,931      2,890      3,890      4,469      8,828
Government Securities
 Subaccount*..............  1,465      2,101     2,317      2,728      2,442      1,494
International
 Subaccount**.............  2,450      1.712     1,041
Small Cap Subaccount***...    227
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Periodic Payment Contracts
                            ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                            1994***     1993      1992**      1991       1990      1989*       1988      1987      1986      1985
 
                            ------     ------     ------     ------     ------     ------     ------     -----     -----     -----
 
<S>                        <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>       <C>
NON-TAX
 QUALIFIED
Accumulation unit value at
 beginning of period
Money Market Subaccount...   1.981      1.950      1.910      1.827      1.712      1.589      1.498     1.423     1.352     1.266
 
Total Return Subaccount...   3.812      3.444      3.431      2.520      2.431      1.986      1.796     1.808     1.591     1.254
 
High Yield Subaccount.....   4.250      3.588      3.086      2.059      2.467      2.532      2.214     2.117     1.822     1.517
 
Equity Subaccount.........   3.412      3.015      2.949      1.873      1.887      1.490      1.503     1.498     1.388     1.124
 
Government Securities
 Subaccount*..............   1.371      1.305      1.248      1.097      1.012
International
 Subaccount**.............   1.285       .980      1.000
Accumulation unit value at
 end of period
Money Market Subaccount...   2.033      1.981      1.950      1.910      1.827      1.712      1.589     1.498     1.423     1.352
 
Total Return Subaccount...   3.406      3.812      3.444      3.431      2.520      2.431      1.986     1.796     1.808     1.591
 
High Yield Subaccount.....   4.101      4.250      3.588      3.086      2.059      2.467      2.532     2.214     2.117     1.822
 
Equity Subaccount.........   3.233      3.412      3.015      2.949      1.873      1.887      1.490     1.503     1.498     1.388
 
Government Securities
 Subaccount*..............   1.317      1.371      1.305      1.248      1.097      1.012
International
 Subaccount**.............   1.223      1.285       .980
Small Cap Subaccount***...   1.031
Number of accumulation
 units outstanding at end
 of period
 (000's omitted)
Money Market Subaccount...   7,343      6,204      9,820     10,507     11,618      9,243      7,783     7,202     6,864     1,734
 
Total Return Subaccount...  24,773     26,640     26,043     19,953     18,485     18,671     15,835    18,807     7,053     2,702
 
High Yield Subaccount.....  12,416     14,735     14,424     12,799     11,858     18,281     14,589    10,186     9,306     4,723
 
Equity Subaccount.........  19,776     17,851     15,849      9,577      7,812      5,542      9,303     8,919     3,820     9,192
 
Government Securities
 Subaccount*..............  23,487     28,787     28,286     18,252     10,338      2,109
International
 Subaccount**.............  14,546     15,713      3,646
Small Cap Subaccount***...   1,242
</TABLE>
 
  * The Government Securities Subaccount commenced business on November 6, 1989.
 ** The International Subaccount commenced business on January 6, 1992.
*** The Small Cap Subaccount commenced business on May 2, 1994.
 
The financial statements and report of independent auditors of KILICO are also
contained in the Statement of Additional Information.
 
                                        6
<PAGE>   10
 
                   KILICO, THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT AND THE FUND
 
KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company ("KILICO"), 1 Kemper Drive, Long Grove,
Illinois 60049, was organized in 1947 and is a stock life insurance company
organized under the laws of the State of Illinois. KILICO is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Kemper Financial Companies, Inc. ("KFC"), a nonoperating holding
company. KFC is a subsidiary of Kemper Corporation ("Kemper"), another public
financial services holding company. KILICO offers life insurance and annuity
products and is admitted to do business in the District of Columbia and all
states except New York. KILICO's financial statements appear in the Statement of
Additional Information.
 
On April 11, 1995, Kemper and an investor group comprised of Zurich Insurance
Company ("Zurich") and Insurance Partners, L.P. and Insurance Partners Offshore
(Bermuda), L.P. announced that they reached an agreement in principle pursuant
to which Kemper, including KILICO, would be acquired in a merger transaction.
Following the transaction, Zurich, or an affiliate, would be the majority owner
of Kemper, including KILICO. A definitive agreement is expected in early May,
subject to the completion of the investor group's due diligence. Consummation of
the transaction is subject to, among other things, stockholder and regulatory
approvals. The transaction is expected to close early in the fourth quarter of
1995.
 
THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
KILICO originally established the KILICO Variable Annuity Separate Account (the
"Separate Account") on May 29, 1981 pursuant to Illinois law as the KILICO Money
Market Separate Account, registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission
("Commission") as an open-end, diversified management investment company under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 ("1940 Act"). On November 2, 1989, Contract
Owners approved a Reorganization under which the Separate Account was
restructured as a unit investment trust registered with the Commission under the
1940 Act. Such registration does not involve supervision by the Commission of
the management, investment practices or policies of the Separate Account or
KILICO.
 
The Separate Account is administered and accounted for as part of the general
business of KILICO, but the income and capital gains or capital losses, whether
or not realized, for assets allocated to the Separate Account are credited to or
charged against the assets held in the Separate Account, without regard to any
other income, capital gains or capital losses of any other separate account or
arising out of any other business which KILICO may conduct. The benefits
provided under the Contracts are obligations of KILICO. The assets of the
Separate Account are not chargeable with liabilities arising out of the business
conducted by any other separate account or out of any other business KILICO may
conduct.
 
The Separate Account holds assets that are segregated from all of KILICO's other
assets. The Separate Account is used to support the variable annuity contracts
described herein. The obligations to Contract Owners and beneficiaries arising
under the Contracts are general corporate obligations of KILICO.
 
The Separate Account is currently divided into seven Subaccounts. Each
Subaccount invests exclusively in shares of one of the corresponding Portfolios
of the Fund. Additional Subaccounts may be added in the future.
 
The Separate Account will purchase and redeem shares from the Fund at net asset
value. KILICO will redeem Fund shares as necessary to provide benefits, to
deduct charges under the Contracts and to transfer assets from one Subaccount to
another as requested by Contract Owners. All dividends and capital gains
distributions received by the Separate Account from a Portfolio of the Fund will
be reinvested in such Portfolio at net asset value and retained as assets of the
corresponding Subaccount.
 
The Separate Account's financial statements appear in the Statement of
Additional Information.
 
THE FUND
 
The Separate Account invests in shares of the Kemper Investors Fund, a series
type mutual fund registered with the Commission as an open-end, diversified
management investment company. Registration of the Fund does not involve
supervision of its management, investment practices or policies by the
Commission. The Fund is designed to provide an investment vehicle for variable
life insurance and variable annuity contracts. Shares of the Fund are sold only
to insurance company separate accounts. In addition to selling shares to
variable annuity and variable life separate accounts of KILICO and its
affiliates (currently, the Separate Account and KILICO Variable Separate
Account), shares of the Fund may be sold to variable life insurance and variable
annuity separate accounts of
 
                                        7
<PAGE>   11
 
insurance companies not affiliated with KILICO. It is conceivable that in the
future it may be disadvantageous for variable life insurance separate accounts
and variable annuity separate accounts of companies unaffiliated with KILICO, or
for both variable life insurance separate accounts and variable annuity separate
accounts, to invest simultaneously in the Fund. Currently, neither KILICO nor
the Fund foresees any such disadvantages to either variable life insurance or
variable annuity owners. Management of the Fund has an obligation to monitor
events to identify material conflicts between such owners and determine what
action, if any, should be taken. In addition, if KILICO believes that the Fund's
response to any of those events or conflicts insufficiently protects the Owners,
it will take appropriate action on its own.
 
The Fund currently consists of the following Portfolios: Money Market, Total
Return, High Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and Small Cap.
The assets of each Portfolio are held separate from the assets of the other
Portfolios, and each Portfolio has its own distinct investment objective and
policies. Each Portfolio operates as a separate investment fund, and the
investment performance of one Portfolio has no effect on the investment
performance of any other Portfolio.
 
The investment objectives and policies of the Fund's Portfolios are summarized
below:
 
MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks to provide maximum current income
to the extent consistent with stability of principal. It will maintain a dollar
weighted average portfolio maturity of 90 days or less. This Portfolio pursues
its objective of maximum income and stability of principal by investing in money
market securities such as U.S. Treasury obligations, commercial paper, and
certificates of deposit and bankers' acceptances of domestic and foreign banks,
including foreign branches of domestic banks, and will enter into repurchase
agreements.
 
TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks a high total return, a combination
of income and capital appreciation, by investing in a combination of debt
securities and common stocks. The Portfolio's investments will normally consist
of fixed-income and equity securities. Fixed-income securities will include
bonds and other debt securities and preferred stocks, some of which may have a
call on common stocks through attached warrants or a conversion privilege.
Equity investments normally will consist of common stocks and securities
convertible into or exchangeable for common stocks; however the Portfolio may
also make private placement investments (which are normally restricted
securities).
 
HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks to provide a high level of current
income by investing in fixed-income securities, including lower rated and
unrated securities which may entail relatively greater risk of loss of income or
principal but may offer a current yield or yield to maturity which is higher.
Lower and unrated securities, which are sometimes referred to by the popular
press as "junk bonds," have widely varying characteristics and quality. The
Portfolio invests in U.S. Government, corporate, and other notes and bonds
paying high current income.
 
EQUITY PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks maximum appreciation of capital through
diversification of investment securities having potential for capital
appreciation. Current income will not be a significant factor. This Portfolio's
investments normally will consist of common stocks and securities convertible
into or exchangeable for common stocks; however, it may also make private
placement investments (which are normally restricted securities).
 
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks high current return
consistent with preservation of capital from a portfolio composed primarily of
U.S. Government securities. The Portfolio will also invest in fixed-income
securities other than U.S. Government securities, and will engage in options and
financial futures transactions. The Portfolio may purchase or sell portfolio
securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis. The Portfolio's current
return is sought from interest income and net short-term gains on securities and
options and futures transactions.
 
INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks a total return, a combination of
capital growth and income, principally through an internationally diversified
portfolio of equity securities. While this Portfolio invests principally in
equity securities of non-United States issuers, this Portfolio may also invest
in convertible and debt securities of non-United States issuers and foreign
currencies.
 
SMALL CAP PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio seeks maximum appreciation of capital. At
least 65% of its total assets normally will be invested in the equity securities
of smaller companies, i.e., those having a market capitalization of $1 billion
or less at the time of investment. Current income will not be a significant
factor. This Portfolio's investments normally will consist primarily of common
stocks and securities convertible into or exchangeable for common stocks and to
a limited degree in preferred stocks and debt securities.
 
There is no assurance that any of the Portfolios of the Fund will achieve its
stated objective. More detailed information, including a description of risks
involved in investing in each of the Portfolios, may be found in the prospectus
for the Fund, which must accompany or precede this Prospectus, and the Fund's
Statement of Additional
 
                                        8
<PAGE>   12
 
Information available upon request from Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company,
1 Kemper Drive, Long Grove, Illinois 60049, or Kemper Financial Services, Inc.,
120 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60603. Read the prospectus carefully
before investing.
 
Kemper Financial Services, Inc., ("KFS" or the "Adviser"), an affiliate of
KILICO is the investment adviser to the Fund and manages its daily investments
and business affairs, subject to the policies established by the trustees of the
Fund. For its advisory services to the Portfolios, the Adviser receives
compensation monthly at annual rates equal to .50 of 1%, .55 of 1%, .60 of 1%,
 .60 of 1%, .55 of 1%, .75 of 1% and .65 of 1% of the average daily net asset
values of the Money Market Portfolio, the Total Return Portfolio, the High Yield
Portfolio, the Equity Portfolio, the Government Securities Portfolio, the
International Portfolio, and the Small Cap Portfolio, respectively.
 
CHANGE OF INVESTMENTS
 
KILICO reserves the right, subject to applicable law, to make additions to,
deletions from, or substitutions for the shares held by the Separate Account or
that the Separate Account may purchase. KILICO reserves the right to eliminate
the shares of any of the portfolios of the Fund and to substitute shares of
another portfolio of the Fund or of another investment company, if the shares of
a portfolio are no longer available for investment, or if in its judgment
further investment in any portfolio becomes inappropriate in view of the
purposes of the Separate Account. KILICO will not substitute any shares
attributable to a Contract Owner's interest in a Subaccount of the Separate
Account without notice to the Contract Owner and prior approval of the
Commission, to the extent required by the 1940 Act or other applicable law.
Nothing contained in this Prospectus shall prevent the Separate Account from
purchasing other securities for other series or classes of policies, or from
permitting a conversion between series or classes of policies on the basis of
requests made by Contract Owners.
 
KILICO also reserves the right to establish additional subaccounts of the
Separate Account, each of which would invest in a new portfolio of the Fund, or
in shares of another investment company, with a specified investment objective.
New subaccounts may be established when, in the sole discretion of KILICO,
marketing needs or investment conditions warrant, and any new subaccounts may be
made available to existing Contract Owners as determined by KILICO. KILICO may
also eliminate or combine one or more subaccounts, transfer assets, or it may
substitute one subaccount for another subaccount, if, in its sole discretion,
marketing, tax, or investment conditions warrant. KILICO will notify all
Contract Owners of any such changes.
 
If deemed by KILICO to be in the best interests of persons having voting rights
under the Policy, the Separate Account may be: (a) operated as a management
company under the 1940 Act; (b) deregistered under that Act in the event such
registration is no longer required; or (c) combined with other KILICO separate
accounts. To the extent permitted by law, KILICO may also transfer the assets of
the Separate Account associated with the Contract to another separate account,
or to the General Account.
 
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION
 
From time to time, the Separate Account may advertise several types of
performance information for the Subaccounts. All Subaccounts may advertise
"average annual total return" and "total return," except "average annual total
return" is not shown for the Money Market Subaccount. The High Yield Subaccount
and the Government Securities Subaccount may also advertise "yield." The Money
Market Subaccount may advertise "yield" and "effective yield." Each of these
figures is based upon historical earnings and is not necessarily representative
of the future performance of a Subaccount. Average annual total return and total
return calculations measure the net income of a Subaccount plus the effect of
any realized or unrealized appreciation or depreciation of the underlying
investments in the Subaccount for the period in question. Average annual total
return will be quoted for periods of at least one year, five years if
applicable, and the life of Subaccount, ending with the most recent calendar
quarter. Average annual total return figures are annualized and, therefore,
represent the average annual percentage change in the value of an investment in
a Subaccount over the applicable period. Total return figures are not annualized
and represent the actual percentage change over the applicable period. Yield is
a measure of the net dividend and interest income earned over a specific one
month or 30-day period (seven-day period for the Money Market Subaccount)
expressed as a percentage of the value of the Subaccount's Accumulation Units.
Yield is an annualized figure, which means that it is assumed that the
Subaccount generates the same level of net income over a one year period which
is compounded on a semi-annual basis. The effective yield for the Money Market
Subaccount is calculated similarly but includes the effect of assumed
compounding calculated under rules prescribed by the Securities and Exchange
Commission. The Money Market Subaccount's effective yield will be slightly
higher than its yield due to this compounding effect. The Subaccounts' units are
sold at Accumulation Unit value. The Subaccounts' performance figures and
Accumulation Unit values will fluctuate. Units of the Subaccount are redeemable
by an
 
                                        9
<PAGE>   13
 
investor at Accumulation Unit value, which may be more or less than original
cost. The performance figures include the deduction of all expenses and fees,
including a prorated portion of the Records Maintenance Charge. Redemptions
within the first six years after purchase may be subject to a Withdrawal Charge
that ranges from 6% the first year to 0% after six years; however, the aggregate
Withdrawal Charge will not exceed 7.25% of aggregate Purchase Payments under the
Contract. Yield, effective yield and total return figures do not include the
effect of any Withdrawal Charge that may be imposed upon the redemption of
units, and thus may be higher than if such charges were deducted. Average annual
total return figures include the effect of the applicable Withdrawal Charge that
may be imposed at the end of the period in question. Additional information
concerning a Subaccount's performance appears in the Statement of Additional
Information. The Subaccounts may provide comparative information with regard to
the Dow Jones Industrial Average, the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, the
Consumer Price Index, the CDA Certificate of Deposit Index, the Lehman Brothers
Government and Corporate Bond Index, the Salomon Brothers High Grade Corporate
Bond Index and the Merrill Lynch Government/Corporate Master Index, the CDA
Mutual Fund--International Index, and the Morgan Stanley Capital International
Europe, Australia, Far East Index and may provide Lipper Analytical Services,
Inc., the VARDS Report and Morningstar, Inc. performance analysis rankings. From
time to time, the Separate Account may quote information from publications such
as MORNINGSTAR, INC., THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, MONEY MAGAZINE, FORBES,
BARRON'S, FORTUNE, THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE, USA TODAY, INSTITUTIONAL INVESTOR,
REGISTERED  REPRESENTATIVE, INVESTMENT ADVISOR AND VARDS.
 
                           FIXED ACCUMULATION OPTION
 
CONTRIBUTIONS UNDER THE FIXED PORTION OF THE CONTRACT AND TRANSFERS TO THE
FIXED PORTION BECOME PART OF THE GENERAL ACCOUNT OF THE INSURANCE COMPANY,
WHICH SUPPORTS INSURANCE AND ANNUITY OBLIGATIONS. BECAUSE OF EXEMPTIVE AND
EXCLUSIONARY PROVISIONS, INTERESTS IN THE GENERAL ACCOUNT HAVE NOT BEEN
REGISTERED UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 ("1933 ACT") NOR IS THE GENERAL
ACCOUNT REGISTERED AS AN INVESTMENT COMPANY UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF
1940 ("1940 ACT"). ACCORDINGLY, NEITHER THE GENERAL ACCOUNT NOR ANY INTERESTS
THEREIN GENERALLY ARE SUBJECT TO THE PROVISIONS OF THE 1933 OR 1940 ACTS AND
KILICO HAS BEEN ADVISED THAT THE STAFF OF THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION HAS NOT REVIEWED THE DISCLOSURES IN THIS PROSPECTUS WHICH RELATE TO
THE FIXED PORTION. DISCLOSURES REGARDING THE FIXED PORTION OF THE CONTRACT AND
THE GENERAL ACCOUNT  HOWEVER, MAY BE SUBJECT TO CERTAIN GENERALLY APPLICABLE
PROVISIONS OF THE FEDERAL SECURITIES LAWS RELATING TO THE ACCURACY AND
COMPLETENESS OF STATEMENTS MADE IN PROSPECTUSES.
 
The Contracts offer a Fixed Accumulation Option (the General Account) under
which KILICO allocates payments to its General Account and pays a fixed interest
rate for stated periods. This Prospectus describes only the element of the
Contract pertaining to the Separate Account except where it makes specific
reference to fixed accumulation and annuity elements.
 
The Contracts guarantee that payments allocated to the General Account will earn
a minimum fixed interest rate of 3%. KILICO, at its discretion, may credit
interest in excess of 3%. KILICO reserves the right to change the rate of excess
interest credited as provided under the terms of the Contract. KILICO also
reserves the right to declare separate rates of excess interest for Purchase
Payments or amounts transferred at designated times, with the result that
amounts at any given designated time may be credited with a higher or lower rate
of excess interest than the rate or rates of excess interest previously credited
to such amounts and Purchase Payments paid or amounts transferred at any other
designated time.
 
                                 THE CONTRACTS
A. GENERAL INFORMATION.
 
This Prospectus offers both Qualified Plan Contracts and Non-Qualified Plan
Contracts. The minimum Purchase Payment for a Qualified Plan is $50. However, so
long as annualized contribution amounts from a payroll or salary deduction plan
are equal to or greater than $600, a periodic payment under $50 will be
accepted. The maximum annual amount of Purchase Payments may be limited by the
provisions of the retirement plan pursuant to which the Contract has been
purchased. For a Non-Qualified Plan Contract the minimum initial Purchase
Payment is $2,500 and the minimum subsequent payment is $500. An initial
allocation of less than $500 may be made to the General Account or to a
Subaccount, or to the General Account and one Subaccount. For a Non-Qualified
Plan, no subsequent allocations of Purchase Payments may be made to any
additional Subaccount until allocations total at least $500 to each Subaccount
in which the Contract has an interest. For a Qualified Plan Contract, as long as
annualized contribution amounts to a new Subaccount from a payroll or salary
reduction plan are equal to or greater than $25 per month, allocations to
another such Subaccount may be made.
 
KILICO may at any time amend the Contract in accordance with changes in the law,
including applicable tax laws, regulations or rulings, and for other purposes.
Contracts permitting flexible payments are no longer offered, although Purchase
Payments are still permitted under previously issued flexible payment contracts.
 
                                       10
<PAGE>   14
 
A Contract Owner is allowed a "free look" period (generally 10 days, subject to
state variation) after receiving the Contract, to review it and decide whether
or not to keep it. If the Contract Owner decides to return the Contract, it may
be cancelled by delivering or mailing it to KILICO. Upon receipt by KILICO, the
Contract will be cancelled and a refund will be made. The amount of the refund
will depend on the state in which the Contract is issued; however, it generally
will be an amount at least equal to the Contract Value on the date of receipt by
KILICO, without any deduction for withdrawal charges or Records Maintenance
charges. However, in some states applicable law requires that the amount of the
Purchase Payment be returned.
 
During the Accumulation Period, the Contract Owner may assign the Contract or
change a Beneficiary at any time by filing such assignment or change with
KILICO's home office at 1 Kemper Drive, Long Grove, Illinois 60049. No
assignment or Beneficiary change shall be binding on KILICO until received by
KILICO. KILICO assumes no responsibility for the validity of such assignment or
Beneficiary change. An assignment may subject the Owner to immediate tax
liability. (See "Tax Treatment of Withdrawals, Loans and Assignments.")
 
Amounts payable during the Annuity Period may not be assigned or encumbered and,
to the extent permitted by law, are not subject to levy, attachment or other
judicial process for the payment of the payee's debts or obligations.
 
The original Beneficiary may be named in the application for the Contract. If a
Beneficiary is not named, or if no named Beneficiary survives the Annuitant, the
Beneficiary shall be the Annuitant's or Owner's estate.
 
Assignment of interest in the Contract or change of Beneficiary designation
under a Qualified Plan Contract may be prohibited by the provisions of the
applicable plan.
 
B. THE ACCUMULATION PERIOD.
 
1. APPLICATION OF PURCHASE PAYMENTS.
 
Purchase Payments are allocated to the Subaccount(s) or General Account as
selected by the Contract Owner. The amount of each Purchase Payment credited to
a Subaccount will be based on the next computed value of an Accumulation Unit
following receipt of payment in proper form by KILICO. The value of an
Accumulation Unit is determined when the net asset values of the Portfolios of
the Fund are calculated, which is generally at 3:00 p.m. Chicago time (11:00
a.m. and 3:00 p.m. Chicago time for the Money Market Portfolio) on each day that
the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading. Purchase Payments allocated to
the General Account will begin earning interest one day after receipt in proper
form. However, with respect to initial Purchase Payments, the amount will be
credited only after an affirmative determination by KILICO to issue the
Contract, but no later than the second day following receipt of the Purchase
Payment. After the initial purchase, the number of Accumulation Units credited
is determined by dividing the Purchase Payment amount allocated to a Subaccount
by the Accumulation Unit value which is next computed following receipt by
KILICO of any Purchase Payment in good funds. Purchase Payments will not be
received except on those days when the New York Stock Exchange is open for
trading.
 
The number of Accumulation Units will not change because of a subsequent change
in value. The dollar value of an Accumulation Unit will vary to reflect the
investment experience of the Subaccount and the assessment of charges against
the Subaccount other than the Records Maintenance Charge. The number of
Accumulation Units will be reduced upon assessment of the Records Maintenance
Charge.
 
If KILICO has not been provided with information sufficient to establish a
Contract or to properly credit such Purchase Payment, it will promptly request
that the necessary information be furnished. If the requested information is not
furnished within five (5) business days of initial receipt of the Purchase
Payment, or if KILICO determines that it cannot otherwise issue the Contract
within the five (5) day period, the Purchase Payment will be returned to the
Owner.
 
2. ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUE.
 
Each Subaccount has an Accumulation Unit value. When Purchase Payments or other
amounts are allocated to a Subaccount, a number of units are purchased based on
the Subaccount's Accumulation Unit value at the end of the Valuation Period
during which the allocation is made. When amounts are transferred out of or
deducted from a Subaccount, units are redeemed in a similar manner.
 
The Accumulation Unit value for each subsequent Valuation Period is the
investment experience factor for that period multiplied by the Accumulation Unit
value for the immediately preceding period. Each Valuation Period has a single
Accumulation Unit value which is applied to each day in the period.
 
                                       11
<PAGE>   15
 
Each Subaccount has its own investment experience factor. The investment
experience of the Separate Account is calculated by applying the investment
experience factor to the Accumulation Unit value in each Subaccount during a
Valuation Period.
 
The investment experience factor of a Subaccount for a Valuation Period is
determined by dividing (1) by (2) and subtracting (3) from the result, where:
 
     (1) is the net result of:
 
         a. the net asset value per share of the investment held in the
         Subaccount determined at the end of the current Valuation Period; plus
 
         b. the per share amount of any dividend or capital gain distributions
         made by the investments held in the Subaccount, if the "ex-dividend"
         date occurs during the current Valuation Period; plus or minus
 
         c. a charge or credit for any taxes reserved for the current Valuation
         Period which KILICO determines to have resulted from the investment
         operations of the Subaccount;
 
     (2) is the net asset value per share of the investment held in the
     Subaccount, determined at the end of the last prior Valuation Period;
 
     (3) is the factor representing the mortality and expense risk and
     administrative cost charge stated in the Contract for the number of days in
     the Valuation Period.
 
3. CONTRACT VALUE.
 
Separate Account Contract Value on any Valuation Date can be determined by
multiplying the total number of Accumulation Units credited to the Contract for
a Subaccount by the value of an Accumulation Unit for that Subaccount on that
Valuation Date, then adding the values of the Owner's Contract interest in each
Subaccount in which the Contract is participating. That amount, when added to
the Owner's Contract interest in the General Account, equals the Contract Value.
 
4. TRANSFER DURING ACCUMULATION PERIOD.
 
During the Accumulation Period, a Contract Owner may transfer the Contract Value
among the Subaccounts and the Fixed Accumulation Option subject to the following
provisions: (i) No transfer can be made until the initial Purchase Payment has
been in a Subaccount or the General Account for fifteen days; (ii) Once all or
part of the Owner's Separate Account Contract Value has been transferred to the
General Account or from one Subaccount to another Subaccount another transfer
may not be made within the next fifteen day period; (iii) Once all or part of
the Owner's General Account Contract Value has been transferred to a Subaccount
another transfer may not be made within the next fifteen day period; and (iv)
The General Account Contract Value, less Debt, may be transferred one time
during the Contract Year to one or more Subaccounts in the thirty day period
following an anniversary of a Contract Year or the thirty day period following
the date of the confirmation statement provided for the period through the
anniversary date, if later.
 
KILICO will make transfers pursuant to proper written or telephone instructions
which specify in detail the requested changes. Before telephone transfer
instructions will be honored by KILICO, a telephone transfer authorization must
be completed by the Contract Owner. The minimum partial transfer amount is $500.
No partial transfer may be made if the value of the Contract Owner's remaining
Contract interest in a Subaccount or the General Account, from which amounts are
to be transferred, would be less than $500 after such transfer. Transfers
involving a Subaccount will be based upon the Accumulation Unit values next
determined following receipt of valid, complete transfer instructions by KILICO.
The transfer privilege may be suspended, modified or terminated at any time
(subject to state requirements). KILICO disclaims all liability for acting in
good faith in following instructions which are given in accordance with
procedures established by KILICO, including requests for personal identifying
information, that are designed to limit unauthorized use of the privilege.
Therefore, a Contract Owner would bear the risk of loss in the event of a
fraudulent telephone transfer.
 
5. WITHDRAWAL DURING ACCUMULATION PERIOD.
 
The Contract Owner may redeem all or a portion of the Contract Value less Debt
and previous withdrawals. Contract Owners should be aware that such withdrawals
may, under certain circumstances, be subject to adverse tax consequences under
the Internal Revenue Code. (See "Tax Treatment of Withdrawals, Loans and
Assignments.") A withdrawal of the entire Contract Value is called a surrender.
 
A Contract Owner may withdraw up to 10% of the Contract Value less Debt in any
Contract Year without assessment of any charge. If the Contract Owner withdraws
an amount in excess of 10% of the Contract Value in
 
                                       12
<PAGE>   16
 
any Contract Year, the amount withdrawn in excess of 10% is subject to a
Withdrawal Charge. The Withdrawal Charge starts at 6% in the first Contribution
Year and reduces by 1% each Contribution Year, so that there is no charge
against Accumulation Units withdrawn in their seventh and later Contribution
Years. However, in no event shall the aggregate Withdrawal Charges assessed
against a Contract exceed 7.25% of the aggregate Purchase Payments made under
the Contract.
 
In the case of a Contract invested other than solely in one Subaccount, a
Contract Owner requesting a partial withdrawal must specify what portion of the
Owner's Contract interest is to be redeemed. If a Contract Owner does not
specify what portion of the Owner's Contract interest is to be redeemed, KILICO
will redeem Accumulation Units from all Subaccounts in which the Contract Owner
has an interest and the General Account. The number of Accumulation Units
redeemed from each Subaccount and the amount redeemed from the General Account
will be in approximately the proportion which the Owner's Contract interest in
each Subaccount and in the General Account bears to the Contract Value. In all
cases, the Accumulation Units attributable to the earliest Contribution Years
will be redeemed first.
 
The Contract Owner may request a partial withdrawal subject to the following
conditions:
 
     (1) The amount requested must be at least $500, or the Owner's entire
     interest in the Subaccount or the General Account from which withdrawal is
     requested.
 
     (2) The Owner's Contract interest in the Subaccount, or the General Account
     from which the withdrawal is requested must be at least $500 after the
     withdrawal is completed.
 
Election to withdraw shall be made in writing to KILICO at its home office at 1
Kemper Drive, Long Grove, Ill. 60049 and should be accompanied by the Contract
if the request is for total withdrawal. Withdrawal requests will not be received
except on KILICO business days which are those days when the New York Stock
Exchange is open for trading. The Withdrawal Value attributable to the
Subaccounts is determined on the basis of the Accumulation Unit values next
computed following receipt of the request in proper order. The Withdrawal Value
attributable to the Subaccounts will be paid within seven (7) days after the
date a proper written request is received by KILICO at its home office provided,
however, that KILICO may suspend the right of withdrawal or delay payment more
than seven (7) days (a) during any period when the New York Stock Exchange is
closed (other than customary weekend and holiday closings), (b) when trading in
the markets a Portfolio of the Fund normally utilizes is restricted or an
emergency exists as determined by the Securities and Exchange Commission, so
that disposal of the Subaccount's investments or determination of its
Accumulation Unit value is not reasonably practicable, or (c) for such other
periods as the Securities and Exchange Commission by order may permit for the
protection of Contract Owners or Unitholders.
 
A participant in the Texas Optional Retirement Program ("ORP") is required to
obtain a certificate of termination from the participant's employer before a
Contract can be redeemed. This requirement is imposed because the Attorney
General of Texas has ruled that participants in the ORP may redeem their
interest in a Contract issued pursuant to the ORP only upon termination of
employment in Texas public institutions of higher education, or upon retirement,
death or total disability. In those states adopting identical requirements for
optional retirement programs, KILICO will follow the same procedures. See
"Qualified Plans" for information on tax-sheltered annuities.
 
6. DEATH BENEFIT.
 
If the Annuitant dies during the Accumulation Period, prior to attaining age 75,
the Contract Value less Debt as computed at the end of the Valuation Period next
following receipt by KILICO of due proof of death and the return of the
Contract, or the total amount of Purchase Payments less Debt, whichever is
greater, will be paid to the designated Beneficiary. If a Contract has been
subject to any partial withdrawal, the death benefit will be the greater of (a)
the Contract Value less Debt or (b) the total amount of Purchase Payments, less
both Debt and the aggregate dollar amount of all previous partial withdrawals.
If death occurs at age 75 or later, the death benefit will be the Contract Value
less Debt. The Owner or Beneficiary, as appropriate, may elect to have all or a
part of the death proceeds paid to the Beneficiary under one of the Annuity
Options described under "Annuity Options" below.
 
For Non-Qualified Plan Contracts issued on and after January 19, 1985, if the
Owner is not the Annuitant and the Owner dies before the Annuitant, the death
benefit will be paid to the designated Beneficiary. The death benefit is
determined as stated above, except that the age of the Owner at death is used in
determining the amount payable. If the Beneficiary is the surviving spouse of
the Owner, the surviving spouse may elect to be treated as the successor Owner
of the Contract with no requirement to begin Death Benefit distribution. The
issue age of the deceased Owner applies in computing the Death Benefit, payable
at the death of a spouse who has elected to be treated as the successor Owner.
 
                                       13
<PAGE>   17
 
                         CONTRACT CHARGES AND EXPENSES
 
Charges and deductions under the Contracts are made for KILICO's assumption of
mortality and expense risk and administrative expenses, and for an annual
Records Maintenance Charge. Subject to certain expense limitations, investment
management fees and other expenses of the Fund are indirectly borne by the
Contract Owner. KILICO will deduct state premium taxes from Contract Value when
paid by KILICO. Where applicable, the dollar amount of state premium taxes
previously paid or paid upon annuitization by KILICO will be charged back
against the Contract Value when and if the Contract is annuitized. Additionally,
where applicable, a Withdrawal Charge may be assessed by KILICO in the event of
early withdrawal or early annuitization.
 
A. CHARGES AGAINST THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT.
 
During the Accumulation Period and the Annuity Period, KILICO assesses that
portion of each Subaccount representing assets under Periodic Payment Contracts
with a daily asset charge for mortality and expense risks and administrative
costs, which amounts to an aggregate of one and three-tenths percent (1.30%) per
annum (consisting of approximately .70% for mortality risks, approximately .30%
for expense risks and approximately .30% for administrative costs). Flexible
Payment Contracts, which are no longer offered, have a daily asset charge of
1.00%. The administrative charge is intended to cover the average anticipated
administrative expenses to be incurred over the period the Contracts are in
force. With an administrative charge based on a percentage of assets, however,
there is not necessarily a direct relationship between the amount of the charge
and the administrative costs of a particular account. Additionally, KILICO
deducts an annual Records Maintenance Charge of $36 (assessed ratably each
quarter) for each Contract as described below. The Records Maintenance Charge is
not assessed during the Annuity Period.
 
These charges may be decreased by KILICO without notice but may not exceed the
rate or amount shown above. If the daily asset charge is insufficient to cover
the risks and costs, any loss or deficiency will fall on KILICO. Conversely, if
the charges prove more than sufficient, the gain will accrue to KILICO, creating
a profit which would be available for any proper corporate purpose including,
among other things, payment of distribution expenses.
 
1. RECORDS MAINTENANCE CHARGE.
 
KILICO will assess an annual Records Maintenance Charge of $36 (assessed ratably
each quarter) during the Accumulation Period against each Contract which has
participated in one or more of the Subaccounts during the calendar year whether
or not any Purchase Payments have been made during the year. This charge is to
reimburse KILICO for expenses incurred in establishing and maintaining the
records relating to a Contract's participation in the Separate Account. This
charge has been set at a level not greater than its costs. The imposition of the
Records Maintenance Charge will be made at the end of each calendar quarter and
will constitute a reduction in the net assets of each Subaccount.
 
At any time the Records Maintenance Charge is assessed, an equal portion of the
applicable charge will be assessed against each Subaccount in which the Contract
is participating and a number of Accumulation Units sufficient to equal the
proper portion of the charge will be redeemed from each Subaccount, or from the
General Account Contract Value if necessary to meet the assessment.
 
2. MORTALITY RISK.
 
Variable Annuity payments reflect the investment experience of each Subaccount
but are not affected by changes in actual mortality experience or by actual
expenses incurred by KILICO.
 
The mortality risk assumed by KILICO arises from two contractual obligations.
First, in case of the death of the Contract Owner or of the Annuitant prior to
the Annuitant's 75th birthday, and prior to the Annuity Date, KILICO will return
to the Beneficiary the Contract Value minus Debt, or the total amount of
Purchase Payments minus Debt, whichever is greater. If a Contract has been
subject to a partial withdrawal, the death benefit shall be the greater of (a)
Contract Value minus Debt, or (b) the total amount of Purchase Payments, minus
both Debt and the aggregate dollar amount of all previous partial withdrawals.
The second contractual obligation assumed by KILICO is to continue to make
annuity payments to each Annuitant for the entire life of the Annuitant under
Annuity Options involving life contingencies.
 
The latter assures each Annuitant that neither the Annuitant's own longevity nor
an improvement in life expectancy generally will have an adverse effect on the
annuity payments received under a Contract and relieves the Annuitant from the
risk of outliving the amounts accumulated for retirement.
 
                                       14
<PAGE>   18
 
3. EXPENSE RISK.
 
KILICO also assumes the risk that all actual expenses involved in administering
the Contracts including Contract maintenance costs, administrative costs, data
processing costs and costs of other services may exceed the amount recovered
from the Records Maintenance Charge or the amount recovered from the
administrative cost portion of the daily asset charge.
 
4. ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS.
 
The daily asset charge for administrative costs is imposed to reimburse KILICO
for the expenses it incurs for administering the Contracts, which include, among
other things, responding to Contract Owner inquiries, processing changes in
Purchase Payment allocations and providing reports to Contract Owners.
 
B. WITHDRAWAL CHARGE.
 
No sales charge is deducted from any Purchase Payment. However, a contingent
deferred sales charge ("Withdrawal Charge") will be used to cover expenses
relating to the sale of the Contracts, including commissions paid to sales
personnel, and other promotion and acquisition expenses. Also, withdrawals
(which may include certain loans) may be subject to certain adverse tax
consequences. (See "Tax Treatment of Withdrawals, Loans and Assignments.")
 
A Contract Owner may withdraw up to 10% of the Contract Value less Debt
determined at the time the withdrawal is requested in any Contract Year without
assessment of any charge. If the Contract Owner withdraws an amount in excess of
10% of the Contract Value in any Contract Year, the amount withdrawn in excess
of 10% subjects the Contract to a Withdrawal Charge. The Withdrawal Charge
starts at 6% in the first Contribution Year and reduces by 1% each Contribution
Year, so that there is no charge against Accumulation Units withdrawn or
annuitized in their seventh and later Contribution Years as shown below:
                                                            
<TABLE>                                                     
<CAPTION>                                                   
              
               YEAR OF                                                    
              WITHDRAWAL                                                  
                AFTER                                      WITHDRAWAL  
              PURCHASE                                       CHARGE      
              ---------                                    ----------  
              <S>                                             <C>         
              First.........................................   6%         
              Second........................................   5%         
              Third.........................................   4%         
              Fourth........................................   3%         
              Fifth.........................................   2%         
              Sixth.........................................   1%         
              Seventh and following.........................   0%         
</TABLE>
               
When a withdrawal is requested, the recipient will receive a check in the amount
requested. To the extent that any Withdrawal Charge is applicable, the Contract
Value will be reduced by the amount of the Withdrawal Charge in addition to the
actual dollar amount sent to the Owner.
 
Because the Contribution Years are Contract Years in which a Purchase Payment is
made, Contract Owners may be subject to a Withdrawal Charge as indicated above,
even though the Contract may have been issued many years earlier. However, in no
event shall the aggregate Withdrawal Charges assessed against a Contract exceed
7.25% of the aggregate Purchase Payments made under the Contract. (For
additional details, see "Withdrawal During Accumulation Period.")
 
The Withdrawal Charges are intended to compensate KILICO for expenses in
connection with distribution of the Contracts. Under current assumptions, KILICO
anticipates Withdrawal Charges will not fully cover distribution expenses. To
the extent that distribution expenses are not recovered from Withdrawal Charges,
those expenses may be recovered from KILICO's general assets. Those assets may
include proceeds from the mortality and expense charge described above.
 
The Withdrawal Charge also applies at the time of annuitization to amounts
attributable to Accumulation Units in their sixth Contribution Year or earlier.
The amount annuitized is subject to the Withdrawal Charge, as applicable. There
shall be no Withdrawal Charge assessed upon annuitization so long as annuity
payments provide for payment under Annuity Options 2, 3 or 4, or payments under
Annuity Option 1 are scheduled to continue for at least five years. Effective
September 4, 1990, for Qualified Plan Contracts, Withdrawal Charges will be
waived if a Contract is
 
                                       15
<PAGE>   19
 
surrendered in the sixth Contract Year or later when the Annuitant is at least
59 1/2 years old at the time of such surrender.
 
The Withdrawal Charge may be reduced or eliminated, but only to the extent
KILICO anticipates that it will incur lower sales expenses or perform fewer
services because of economies arising from the size of the particular group, the
average contribution per participant, or the use of mass enrollment procedures.
Units of a Subaccount sold to officers, directors and employees of KILICO and
the Fund, the Fund's investment adviser, and principal underwriter or certain
affiliated companies, or to any trust, pension, profit-sharing or other benefit
plan for such persons may be withdrawn without any Withdrawal Charge.
 
C. FUND INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT FEE AND OTHER EXPENSES.
 
The net asset value of each of the Portfolios of the Fund reflects investment
management fees and certain general operating expenses already deducted from the
assets of the Portfolios. Subject to certain limitations, these fees and
expenses are indirectly borne by the Contract Owners. Investment management fees
are described on page 9. Further detail about fees and expenses of the
Portfolios is provided in the attached Prospectus for the Fund and in the Fund's
Statement of Additional Information.
 
D. STATE PREMIUM TAXES.
 
Certain state and local governments impose a premium tax ranging from 0% to 3.5%
on the amount of Purchase Payments. Where applicable, the dollar amount of state
premium taxes previously paid or payable upon annuitization by KILICO may be
charged against the Contract Value if not previously assessed, when and if the
Contract is annuitized. See "Appendix--State Premium Tax Chart" in the Statement
of Additional Information.
 
                               THE ANNUITY PERIOD
 
Contracts may be annuitized under one of several Annuity Options. Annuity
payments will begin on the Annuity Date under the Annuity Option selected by the
Owner.
 
1. ANNUITY PAYMENTS.
 
Annuity payments will be determined on the basis of (i) the annuity table
specified in the Contract, (ii) the Annuity Option selected, and (iii) the
investment performance of the Subaccount selected. The Annuitant receives the
value of a fixed number of Annuity Units each month. The value of an Annuity
Unit will reflect the investment performance of the Subaccounts selected, and
the amount of each annuity payment will vary accordingly. Annuity payments may
be subject to a Withdrawal Charge if made within the sixth Contribution Year or
earlier. If the Owner elects an annuity which provides either an income benefit
period of five years or more, or a benefit under which payment is contingent
upon the life of the payee(s), any applicable Withdrawal Charges will be waived.
 
2. ANNUITY OPTIONS.
 
The Contract Owner may elect to have annuity payments made under any one of the
Annuity Options specified in the Contract and described below. The Contract
Owner may decide at any time (subject to the provisions of any applicable
retirement plan) to commence annuity payments. A change of Annuity Option is
permitted if made before the date annuity payments are to commence. For a
Non-Qualified Plan Contract, if no other Annuity Option is elected, monthly
annuity payments will be made in accordance with Option 3 below with a ten (10)
year period certain. For a Qualified Plan Contract, if no other Annuity Option
is elected, monthly annuity payments will be made in the form of a qualified
joint and survivor annuity with a monthly income at two-thirds of the full
amount payable during the lifetime of the surviving payee. Generally, annuity
payments will be made in monthly installments. However, if the net proceeds
available to apply under an Annuity Option are less than $2,000, KILICO shall
have the right to pay the annuity in one lump sum. In addition, if the first
payment provided would be less than $25, KILICO shall have the right to change
the frequency of payments to quarterly, semiannual or annual intervals resulting
in an initial payment of at least $25.
 
The amount of periodic annuity payments will depend upon (a) the type of annuity
option selected; (b) the age of the payee; and (c) the investment experience of
the Subaccounts selected. For example, if the annuity option selected is income
for a specified period, the shorter the period selected the fewer payments will
be made and those payments will have a higher value. If the annuity option
selected is life income, it is likely the payments will be in a smaller amount
than income for a short specified period. If an individual selects the life
income with installments guaranteed option, the payments will probably be in a
smaller amount than for the life income option. If an individual selects the
joint and survivor annuity option, the payments will be smaller than those
measured by an
 
                                       16
<PAGE>   20
 
individual life income option. The age of the payee will also influence the
amount of periodic annuity payments because presumably the older the payee, the
shorter the life expectancy and the larger the payments. Finally, if the
Contract Owner participates in a Subaccount with higher investment performance,
it is likely the Contract Owner will receive a higher periodic payment.
 
For Non-Qualified Plan Contracts issued on and after January 19, 1985, if the
Owner dies before the Annuity Date, Annuity Options which may be elected are
limited. The Annuity Options available are (a) Option 2 or (b) Option 1 or 3 for
a period no longer than the life expectancy of the Beneficiary (but not less
than 5 years from the Owner's death). If the Beneficiary is not an individual,
the entire interest must be distributed within 5 years of the Owner's death. The
Death Benefit distribution must begin no later than one year from the Owner's
death or such later date as prescribed by federal regulation.
 
OPTION 1--INCOME FOR SPECIFIED PERIOD.
 
An annuity payable monthly for a selected number of years ranging from five to
thirty. Upon payee's death, if the Beneficiary is a natural person, KILICO will
automatically continue payments for the remainder of the certain period to the
Beneficiary. If the Beneficiary is either an estate or trust, KILICO will pay a
commuted value of the remaining payments. Variable Annuity payments under Option
1 reflect the payment of the mortality and expense risk charge, even though
there is no life contingency risk associated with Option 1.
 
OPTION 2--LIFE INCOME.
 
An annuity payable monthly during the lifetime of the payee, terminating with
the last monthly payment due prior to the death of the payee. If this Option is
elected, annuity payments terminate automatically and immediately on the death
of the payee without regard to the number or total amount of payments made.
Thus, it is possible for an individual to receive only one payment if death
occurred prior to the date the second payment was due.
 
OPTION 3--LIFE INCOME WITH INSTALLMENTS GUARANTEED.
 
An annuity payable monthly during the lifetime of the payee with the provision
that if, at the death of the payee, payments have been made for less than five,
ten, fifteen or twenty years as elected, and the Beneficiary is a natural
person, KILICO will automatically continue payments for the remainder of the
elected period to the Beneficiary. If the Beneficiary is either an estate or
trust, KILICO will pay a commuted value of the remaining payments.
 
OPTION 4--JOINT AND SURVIVOR ANNUITY.
 
An annuity payable monthly while both payees are living. Upon the death of
either payee, the monthly income payable will continue during the lifetime of
the surviving payee at the percentage of such full amount chosen at the time of
election of this Option. Annuity payments terminate automatically and
immediately upon the death of the surviving payee without regard to the number
or total amount of payments received.
 
Payees under Option 1 by written notice to KILICO may cancel all or part of the
remaining payments due and receive that part of the remaining value of the
Contract.
 
3. ALLOCATION OF ANNUITY.
 
The Contract Owner may elect to have payments made on a fixed or variable basis,
or a combination of both. An Owner may exercise the transfer privilege during
the Accumulation Period for the purposes of such allocation. Any General Account
Contract Value will be annuitized on a fixed basis. Any Separate Account
Contract Value will be annuitized on a variable basis. Transfers during the
Annuity Period are permitted subject to stated limitations.
 
4. TRANSFER DURING ANNUITY PERIOD.
 
During the Annuity Period, the payee may transfer the value of the payee's
Contract interest in a Subaccount(s) to another Subaccount or to the General
Account by written request to KILICO subject to the following limitations:
 
     a. No transfer to a Subaccount may be made during the first year of the
     Annuity Period; subsequent transfers are limited to one per year during the
     Annuity Period.
 
     b. A Contract's entire interest in a Subaccount must be transferred.
 
     c. A transfer to a Subaccount, if notice to KILICO is received more than
     seven (7) days prior to any annuity payment date, shall be effective during
     the Valuation Period next succeeding the date such notice is received. If
     received fewer than seven (7) days before any annuity payment date, the
     transfer shall be effective during the Valuation Period next succeeding
     that annuity payment date.
 
                                       17
<PAGE>   21
 
     d. A transfer to the General Account may be made effective only on an
     anniversary of the first Annuity Date and upon not less than thirty (30)
     days prior written notice to KILICO.
 
The Annuity Unit value of a Subaccount shall be determined as of the end of the
Valuation Period next preceding the effective date of the transfer. The transfer
privilege may be suspended, modified or terminated at any time (subject to state
requirements). Payees should consider the appropriateness of each Subaccount's
investment objectives and risks as an investment during the Annuity Period.
 
5. ANNUITY UNIT VALUE.
 
The value of an Annuity Unit is determined independently for each of the
Subaccounts.
 
For each Subaccount, the Annuity Unit value for any Valuation Period is
determined by multiplying the Annuity Unit value for the immediately preceding
Valuation Period by the net investment factor for the Valuation Period for which
the Annuity Unit value is being calculated, and multiplying the result by an
interest factor which offsets the effect of the assumed investment earnings rate
of 2.5% per annum which is assumed in the annuity tables contained in the
Contract.
 
The net investment factor for each Subaccount for any Valuation Period is
determined by dividing (a) by (b) where:
 
     (a) Is the value of an Accumulation Unit for the applicable Subaccount as
     of the end of the current Valuation Period, plus or minus the per share
     charge or credit for taxes reserved.
 
     (b) Is the value of an Accumulation Unit for the applicable Subaccount as
     of the end of the immediately preceding Valuation Period, plus or minus the
     per share charge or credit for taxes reserved.
 
6. FIRST PERIODIC PAYMENT.
 
At the time annuity payments begin, the value of the Owner's Contract interest
is determined by multiplying the applicable Accumulation Unit values at the end
of the Valuation Period immediately preceding the date the first annuity payment
is due by the respective number of Accumulation Units credited to the Owner's
Contract interest as of the end of such Valuation Period, less the dollar amount
of premium taxes not previously deducted, if applicable, and less the amount of
the Withdrawal Charge, if applicable.
 
There is no withdrawal charge assessed so long as annuity payments provide for
payments under Annuity Options 2, 3 or 4 or payments under Annuity Option 1 are
scheduled to continue for at least five years.
 
The first annuity payment is determined by multiplying the benefit per $1,000 of
value shown in the applicable annuity table by the number of thousands of
dollars of Contract Value less deduction for Debt and premium taxes, if
applicable.
 
A 2.5% per annum assumed investment rate is built into the annuity tables
contained in the Contracts. If the actual net investment rate exceeds 2.5% per
annum, payments will increase at a rate equal to the amount of such excess.
Conversely, if the actual rate is less than 2.5% per annum, annuity payments
will decrease.
 
7. SUBSEQUENT PERIODIC PAYMENTS.
 
The amount of the second and subsequent annuity payments is determined by
multiplying the number of Annuity Units by the Annuity Unit value as of the
Valuation Period next preceding the date on which each annuity payment is due.
The dollar amount of the first annuity payment as determined above is divided by
the Annuity Unit value as of the Annuity Date to establish the number of Annuity
Units representing each annuity payment. The number of Annuity Units determined
for the first annuity payment remains constant for the second and subsequent
monthly payments.
 
8. FIXED ANNUITY PAYMENTS.
 
The amount of each payment under a Fixed Annuity will be determined from tables
prepared by KILICO. Such tables show the monthly payment for each $1,000 of
Contract Value allocated to provide a Fixed Annuity. Fixed Annuity payments will
not change regardless of investment, mortality or expense experience.
 
9. DEATH BENEFIT.
 
If the payee dies after the Annuity Date while the Contract is in force, the
death proceeds, if any, will depend upon the form of annuity payment in effect
at the time of death. (See "Annuity Options.")
 
                                       18
<PAGE>   22
 
                              FEDERAL INCOME TAXES
 
The ultimate effect of Federal income taxes on Contract Value, on annuity
payments and on the economic benefit to the Contract Owner, Annuitant or
Beneficiary depends on KILICO's tax status, the type of retirement plan for
which the Contract is purchased and upon the tax status of the individual
concerned. Each individual Contract Owner should consult a competent tax
advisor.
 
A. KILICO'S TAX STATUS.
 
KILICO is taxed as a life insurance company under the current Internal Revenue
Code. The operations of the Separate Account are taxed as part of the total
operations of KILICO. However, the determination of tax charges and credits to
the Separate Account will be independent of the tax actually paid by KILICO.
 
Under current interpretations of existing Federal income tax law, investment
income of the Separate Account, to the extent that it is applied to increase an
individual Contract Owner's equity, is not taxed. Thus, a Subaccount may realize
net investment income and dividends, and the Subaccount may receive and reinvest
them, all without Federal income tax consequences for the Separate Account.
However, as a result of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, if the Contract Owner is not
an individual, income attributable to Purchase Payments made after February 28,
1986 generally is taxed to the Contract Owner.
 
B. AMOUNTS RECEIVED AS AN ANNUITY.
 
A fixed portion of each annuity payment is excludable from gross income as a
return of investment in the Contract and the balance is taxed as ordinary
income. For payments made on a fixed basis, the excludable amount is generally
the same for each payment. For payments made on a variable basis, the excludable
amount may be recalculated if any payment is less than the excludable amount.
 
The excludable amount of each Annuity Unit is determined by dividing the
investment in the Contract as of the Annuity Date by the number of Annuity Units
to be received under the payment option chosen.
 
For a Non-Qualified Plan Contract, the investment in the Contract is equal to
the Purchase Payments minus any withdrawals thereof. For a Qualified Plan
Contract, the investment in the Contract is equal to the employee's non-
deductible contributions, minus any prior distributions thereof.
 
For Annuity Dates after December 31, 1986, the excludable amount of any payment
may not exceed the unrecovered investment in the Contract immediately before
such payment. For Annuity Dates after July 1, 1986, the amount of the
unrecovered investment is allowed as a deduction on the final return of a
deceased Annuitant where annuity payments cease before the investment in the
Contract has been fully recovered.
 
C. NON-QUALIFIED PLAN CONTRACTS.
 
1. DIVERSIFICATION REQUIREMENTS.
 
While Section 72 of the Code governs the taxation of annuities in general,
Section 817(h) of the Code provides that nonqualified annuity contracts will not
be treated as annuities unless the underlying investments are "adequately
diversified" in accordance with regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the
Treasury. Such regulations require, among other things, that a mutual fund
underlying an annuity contract, such as those underlying the Contracts, may
invest no more than 55% of the value of its assets in one investment; 70% in two
investments; 80% in three investments; and 90% in four investments. If the above
diversification requirements are not met by each and every Portfolio, the
annuity contract could lose its overall tax status as an annuity, resulting in
current taxation of the excess of cash value over the "investment in the
contract" (as defined above) to the Contract Owner. KILICO has reviewed the
diversification regulations and believes that the Contracts are in compliance
with these regulations and that there is no threat to their current favorable
tax status as annuities. Furthermore, KILICO intends to make whatever changes
may be necessary and appropriate to these Contracts in the future in order to
maintain their continued favorable tax treatment.
 
In connection with the earlier issuance of temporary regulations relating to
diversification requirements, the Treasury Department announced that such
regulations do not provide guidance concerning the extent to which owners may
direct their investments to particular Subaccounts. Moreover any additional rule
may apply to pension plan contracts. It is possible that when such guidance is
available, the Contract may need to be modified to comply with such guidance.
Accordingly, KILICO reserves the right to modify the Contract as necessary to
prevent the
 
                                       19
<PAGE>   23
 
Contract Owner from being considered the owner of the assets of the Subaccount.
Because the guidance has not been published, there can be no assurance as to
content or even whether application will be prospective only.
 
2. TAX TREATMENT OF WITHDRAWALS, LOANS AND ASSIGNMENTS.
 
Withdrawals from Non-Qualified Plan Contracts will be allocable first to any
investment in the Contract made prior to August 14, 1982 (if any), then to
ordinary income attributable to such investment, then to ordinary income
attributable to investment in the Contract made after August 13, 1982, and
finally to investment in the Contract made after August 13, 1982. Loans under a
Contract or collateral assignments or pledges of any portion of the value of
such Contract attributable to investment in the Contract after August 13, 1982
or income attributable to such investment are treated as withdrawals.
 
If the Owner transfers a Non-Qualified Plan Contract issued after April 22, 1987
by gift, the Owner must include in gross income the excess of the Contract Value
over the investment in the Contract as of the date of transfer.
 
Non-Qualified Plan Contracts entered into after October 21, 1988 which were
issued by KILICO (or an affiliate) during a calendar year are to be aggregated
and considered a single contract for purposes of determining the amount of any
withdrawal, loan, or assigned or pledged cash value includible in the Owner's
gross income.
 
3. 10-PERCENT PENALTY TAX ON PREMATURE DISTRIBUTIONS.
 
A 10% penalty is imposed on the taxable portion of any distribution to a
participant in a qualified pension or profit sharing plan, tax sheltered annuity
or individual retirement annuity ("IRA"), or under a Non-Qualified Plan
Contract, prior to age 59 1/2, death or disability of the participant or
Non-Qualified Plan Contract Owner.
 
The 10% penalty does not apply to any distribution which is part of a series of
substantially equal periodic payments (not less frequently than annually) made
for the life or life expectancy of the qualified plan participant or Non-
Qualified Plan Contract Owner, provided that there is no change in such payments
before the later of (i) the close of the 5-year period beginning on the date of
the first payment, or (ii) age 59 1/2, death or disability of such participant
or Owner. Further, the 10% penalty does not apply to any distribution from a
qualified pension or profit sharing plan or tax sheltered annuity on account of
retirement after age 55, or to any distribution from a Non-Qualified Plan
Contract: (i) attributable to investment in the Contract before August 14, 1982,
or (ii) where the Contract is an "immediate annuity" under the Internal Revenue
Code ("Code").
 
D. QUALIFIED PLANS.
 
The Contracts offered by this Prospectus are designed to be suitable for use
under Qualified Plans. Such contracts are commonly referred to as "Qualified
Plan Contracts." KILICO, in its sole discretion, reserves the right to waive
certain minimums with respect to large group contracts. Taxation of participants
in such Qualified Plans varies with the type of plan and the terms and
conditions of the specific plan. Qualified Plan Contract Owners, Annuitants and
Beneficiaries are cautioned that benefits under a Qualified Plan may be subject
to the terms and conditions of the plan regardless of the terms and conditions
of the Contracts issued pursuant to the plan. Following are general descriptions
of the types of Qualified Plans and of the use of the Contracts in connection
therewith. Purchasers intending to use the Contracts in connection with
Qualified Plans should seek competent tax advice.
 
     (A) PENSION AND PROFIT-SHARING PLANS.
 
     Sections 401(a) of the Code permits employers to establish qualified
     retirement plans for employees. Taxation of plan participants depends on
     the specific plan. Such plans are limited by law as to maximum permissible
     contributions, distribution dates, non-forfeitability of interests and tax
     rates applicable to distributions. In order to establish such a plan, a
     plan document is adopted and implemented by the employer. Such retirement
     plans may permit the purchase of the Contracts in order to provide benefits
     under the plans.
 
     (b) TAX-SHELTERED ANNUITIES.
 
     Section 403(b) of the Code permits public school employees and employees of
     certain types of charitable, educational and scientific organizations
     specified in Section 501(c)(3) of the Code to purchase annuity contracts
     and, subject to certain limitations, exclude the amount of purchase
     payments from gross income for tax purposes. Generally, the annual
     contribution limit is 20% of an employee's includible compensation times
     the number of years of service, less previously excluded contributions. For
     salary reduction plans the maximum contribution is $9,500. These annuity
     contracts are commonly referred to as "tax-sheltered annuities."
 
                                       20
<PAGE>   24
 
     To the extent attributable to contributions to your tax-sheltered annuity
     contract under a salary reduction agreement (or to transfers of such
     amounts from other contracts), contributions made or earnings credited
     after December 31, 1988 may not be withdrawn until separation from service,
     attainment of age 59 1/2, death or disability. Salary reduction
     contributions after December 31, 1988 may also be withdrawn in the case of
     hardship within the meaning of section 403(b)(11) of the Internal Revenue
     Code. Further, all amounts transferred to your contract from a Section
     403(b)(7) custodial account are subject to such restrictions on withdrawal.
     Under your employer's tax-sheltered annuity plan, you may be allowed to
     transfer your contract value to other types of options, such as other fixed
     or variable annuity contracts or Section 403(b)(7) custodial accounts.
 
     (C) TREATMENT OF CERTAIN DISTRIBUTIONS FROM PENSION AND PROFIT SHARING
     PLANS AND TAX-SHELTERED ANNUITIES.
 
     Distributions from Pension and Profit Sharing Plans and Tax-Sheltered
     Annuities which are eligible to be rolled over to an IRA or another
     employer's retirement plan are generally subject to 20% withholding, unless
     the participant exercises the right to a "direct rollover." A "direct
     rollover" may be accomplished when the sponsor of a participant's existing
     pension or profit sharing plan or tax-sheltered annuity makes a
     distribution payable to the sponsor of the new IRA or new employer plan for
     the participant's benefit.
 
     If the participant does not exercise the right to a "direct rollover," in
     general, 20% will be withheld from the distribution and credited against
     the participant's income taxes incurred in the taxable year of the
     distribution. Other rules may apply, therefore, KILICO suggests that
     participants consult their tax advisors before making a decision.
 
     (D) INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ANNUITIES.
 
     Section 408(b) of the Code permits eligible individuals to make deductible
     contributions to an individual retirement program known as an "Individual
     Retirement Annuity" ("IRA"). Generally, the maximum contribution is $2,000
     for an individual and $2,250 for an individual and spouse eligible for a
     spousal IRA. In addition, certain distributions from qualified pension and
     profit sharing plans, tax-sheltered annuities and other IRA's may be placed
     on a tax-deferred basis into an IRA. When issued in connection with an IRA,
     the Contract will be amended to conform to the requirements under such
     plans. Purchasers have the right to revoke an IRA Contract within seven (7)
     days of the receipt of the IRA disclosure statement which is attached to
     the application used for IRA Contracts. The IRA disclosure statement also
     provides more information on contribution limits. A purchaser can revoke
     the IRA Contract within seven (7) days of the date the application was
     signed by notifying KILICO.
 
     PLEASE NOTE THAT AN IRA DISCLOSURE STATEMENT IS INCLUDED IN THIS PROSPECTUS
     AS AN APPENDIX.
 
     (E) DEFERRED COMPENSATION PLANS.
 
     Section 457 of the Code allows a State defined to also include a political
     subdivision of a State, and an agency or instrumentality of a State or a
     political subdivision of a State, and any other tax exempt organization to
     establish a deferred compensation plan ("Section 457 Plan") for the benefit
     of its employees. Contracts issued under such a plan are owned by the
     employer.
 
     An employee electing to participate in a Section 457 Plan should understand
     that all rights and benefits are governed strictly by the terms of the
     plan. The employer is legal owner of any Contracts issued under the plan.
     The employee is, in fact, a general creditor of the employer under the
     terms of the plan. The employer, as owner of the Contracts, also retains
     all voting and redemption rights which may accrue through the Contracts
     issued under the plan.
 
     The participating employee should look to the terms of the plan for any
     charges in regard to participating in such plan other than those disclosed
     in this Prospectus. Section 457 of the Code places limitations on
     contributions to such plans. A participant must look to the terms of the
     plan for an explanation of this limitation.
 
E. TAX WITHHOLDING.
 
KILICO is required to withhold federal income tax on the taxable portion of all
distributions under the Contracts unless the individual elects under a
nonqualified plan not to be subject to withholding. The rate of withholding will
depend on the type of distribution.
 
F. OTHER CONSIDERATIONS.
 
Because of the complexity of the law and its application to a specific
individual, tax advice may be needed by a person contemplating purchase of a
Contract or the exercise of elections under a Contract. The above comments
 
                                       21
<PAGE>   25
 
concerning the Federal income tax consequences are not exhaustive, and special
rules are provided with respect to situations not discussed in this Prospectus.
 
The preceding description is based upon KILICO's understanding of current
Federal income tax law. KILICO cannot assess the probability that changes in tax
laws, particularly affecting annuities, will be made.
 
The preceding comments do not take into account state income or other tax
considerations which may be involved in the purchase of a Contract or the
exercise of elections under the Contract. For complete information on such
Federal and state tax considerations, a qualified tax adviser should be
consulted.
 
Legislation has been considered which would prohibit insurers from using
sex-distinct factors in determining annuity benefit payments. If "unisex"
requirements are adopted, KILICO may be required to utilize annuity tables which
do not differentiate the amount of annuity benefits on the basis of sex. This
might result in a change providing for either an increase in the initial amount
of monthly benefits applied for females or a decrease in such amount for males
or a combination of both. KILICO is using "unisex" annuity tables on Qualified
Plan Contracts.
 
                           DISTRIBUTION OF CONTRACTS
 
The Contracts are sold by licensed insurance agents, where the Contracts may be
lawfully sold, who are registered representatives of broker-dealers which are
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are members of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. In addition to commissions,
KILICO may, from time to time, pay or allow additional promotional incentives,
in the form of cash or other compensation, to broker-dealers that sell the
Contracts. In some instances, such other incentives may be offered only to
certain licensed broker-dealers that sell or are expected to sell during
specified time periods certain minimum amounts of the Contracts or other
contracts issued by KILICO. The Contracts are distributed through the principal
underwriter for the Separate Account, which is Investors Brokerage Services,
Inc. ("IBS"), a wholly owned subsidiary of KILICO, which enters into selling
group agreements with affiliated and unaffiliated broker-dealers.
 
                                 VOTING RIGHTS
 
Proxy materials in connection with any shareholder meeting of the Fund will be
delivered to each Contract Owner with Subaccount interests invested in the Fund
as of the record date for voting at such meeting. Such proxy materials will
include an appropriate form which may be used to give voting instructions.
KILICO will vote Fund shares held in each Subaccount in accordance with
instructions received from persons having a Subaccount interest in such Fund
shares. Fund shares as to which no timely voting instructions are received will
be voted by KILICO in proportion to the voting instructions received from all
persons in a timely manner. KILICO will also vote any Fund shares attributed to
amounts it has accumulated in the Subaccounts in the same proportion that
Contract Owners vote. As a trust, the Fund is not required to hold annual
shareholders' meetings. It will, however, hold special meetings as required or
deemed desirable for such purposes as electing trustees, changing fundamental
policies or approving an investment advisory agreement.
 
Contract Owners of all Contracts participating in each Subaccount shall have
voting rights with respect to the Portfolio invested in by that Subaccount,
based upon each Contract Owner's proportionate interest in that Subaccount as
measured by units. The person having such voting rights will be the Contract
Owner before surrender, the Annuity Date or the death of the Annuitant, and
thereafter, the payee entitled to receive Variable Annuity payments under the
Contract. During the Annuity Period, voting rights attributable to a Contract
will generally decrease as Annuity Units attributable to an Annuitant decrease.
 
                    REPORTS TO CONTRACT OWNERS AND INQUIRIES
 
Immediately after each Contract anniversary, Contract Owners will be sent
statements for their own Contract showing the amount credited to each Subaccount
and to the Fixed Accumulation Option. It will also show the interest rate(s)
that KILICO is crediting upon amounts then held under the Fixed Accumulation
Option. In addition, Contract Owners transferring amounts among the investment
options or making additional payments will receive written confirmation of such
transactions. Upon request, any Contract Owner will be sent a current statement
in a form similar to that of the annual statement described above. Each Contract
Owner will also be sent an annual and a semi-annual report for the Fund and a
list of the securities held in each Portfolio of the Fund, as required by the
1940 Act.
 
A Contract Owner may direct inquiries to the individual who sold him or her the
Contract or may call 1-800-621-5001 or write to Kemper Investors Life Insurance
Company, Customer Service, 1 Kemper Drive, Long Grove, Illinois 60049.
 
                                       22
<PAGE>   26
 
                             DOLLAR COST AVERAGING
 
A Contract Owner may predesignate a portion of the Contract Value under a
Contract attributable to the Money Market or Government Securities Subaccount to
be automatically transferred on a monthly basis to one or more of the other
Subaccounts and the General Account during the Accumulation Period. A Contract
Owner may enroll in this program at the time the Contract is issued or anytime
thereafter by properly completing the Dollar Cost Averaging enrollment form and
returning it to KILICO at its home office at least five (5) business days prior
to the second Tuesday of a month which is the date that all dollar cost
averaging transfers will be made ("Transfer Date").
 
Transfers will be made in the amounts designated by the Contract Owner and must
be at least $500 per Subaccount or General Account. The total Contract Value in
the Money Market or Government Securities Subaccount at the time Dollar Cost
Averaging is elected must be at least equal to the amount designated to be
transferred on each Transfer Date multiplied by the duration selected. Dollar
Cost Averaging will cease automatically if the Contract Value does not equal or
exceed the amount designated to be transferred on each Transfer Date and the
remaining amount will be transferred.
 
Dollar Cost Averaging will terminate when (i) the number of designated monthly
transfers has been completed, (ii) the Contract Value attributable to the Money
Market or Government Securities Subaccount is insufficient to complete the next
transfer, (iii) the Contract Owner requests termination in writing and such
writing is received by KILICO at its home office at least five (5) business days
prior to the next Transfer Date in order to cancel the transfer scheduled to
take effect on such date, or (iv) the Contract is surrendered or annuitized.
 
If the General Account has a balance of at least $10,000, a Contract Owner may
elect automatic calendar quarter transfers of interest accrued in the General
Account to one or more of the Subaccounts. A Contract Owner may enroll in this
program at any time by completing the proper Dollar Cost Averaging enrollment
form and returning it to KILICO at its home office at least ten (10) days prior
to the end of the calendar quarter. The Transfer Date will be within five
business days of the end of the calendar quarter.
 
Following the Issue Date, a Contract Owner may initiate, reinstate or change
Dollar Cost Averaging or change existing Dollar Cost Averaging terms by properly
completing the new enrollment form and returning it to KILICO at its home office
at least five (5) business days, ten (10) business days for General Account
transfers, prior to the next Transfer Date such transfer is to be made.
 
When utilizing Dollar Cost Averaging, a Contract Owner must be invested in the
Money Market or Government Securities Subaccount or the General Account and may
be invested in the General Account and a maximum of five other Subaccounts at
any given time. Election of Dollar Cost Averaging is not available during the
Annuity Period.
 
                           SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLAN
 
KILICO administers a Systematic Withdrawal Plan ("SWP") which allows certain
Contract Owners to pre-authorize periodic withdrawals during the Accumulation
Period. Contract Owners entering into a SWP agreement instruct KILICO to
withdraw selected amounts from the General Account, or from any of the
Subaccounts on a monthly, quarterly, semi-annual or annual basis. Currently the
SWP is available to Contract Owners who request a minimum $100.00 periodic
payment. If the amounts distributed under the SWP exceed the amount free of
surrender charge (currently 10% of Contract Value) then the surrender charge
will be applied on any amounts exceeding the 10% free withdrawal. WITHDRAWALS
TAKEN UNDER THE SWP MAY BE SUBJECT TO THE 10% FEDERAL TAX PENALTY ON EARLY
WITHDRAWALS AND TO INCOME TAXES AND WITHHOLDING. SEE "FEDERAL INCOME TAXES."
Contract owners interested in SWP may obtain an application and full information
concerning this program and its restrictions from their representative or
KILICO's home office. The right is reserved to amend the SWP on thirty days'
notice. The SWP may be terminated at any time by the Contract Owner or KILICO.
 
                         PROVISIONS OF PRIOR CONTRACTS
 
Certain provisions of the Contract became effective upon the later of June 1,
1993 or the date of state approval. If the provisions are not yet approved in
your state, you will receive an earlier version of the Contract and the
following provisions will apply:
 
FIXED ACCUMULATION OPTIONS.  Fixed accumulations and benefits under the
contracts are provided in two Fixed Accumulation Options of the General Account.
Any portion of the purchase payment allocated to a Fixed
 
                                       23
<PAGE>   27
 
Accumulation Option is credited with interest daily at a rate declared by KILICO
in its sole discretion, but not less than 4%.
 
TRANSFER DURING ACCUMULATION PERIOD.  During the Accumulation Period, a Contract
Owner may transfer the Contract Value among the Subaccounts and the Fixed
Accumulation Options subject to the following provisions: (i) No transfer can be
made until the initial Purchase payment has been in a Subaccount or General
Account I or II for fifteen days; (ii) Once all or part of the Owner's Separate
Account Contract value has been transferred to General Account I or II or from
one Subaccount to another Subaccount another transfer may not be made within the
next fifteen day period; (iii) Once all or part of the Owner's General Account I
Contract Value has been transferred to General Account II or to a Subaccount
another transfer may not be made within the next fifteen day period; and (iv)
General Account II Contract value, less Debt may be transferred one time during
the Contract Year to one or more Subaccounts or to General Account I in the
thirty day period following the anniversary of a Contract year or the thirty day
period following the date of the confirmation statement provided for the period
through the anniversary date, if later.
 
WITHDRAWALS DURING ACCUMULATION PERIOD.  The Contract owner may request a
partial withdrawal subject to the following conditions:
 
(1) The amount requested must be at least $500 or the Owner's entire interest in
the Subaccount, General Account I or General Account II from which withdrawal is
requested.
 
(2) The Owner's Contract interest in the Subaccount, General Account I or
General Account II from which the withdrawal is requested must be at least $500
after the withdrawal is completed.
 
RECORDS MAINTENANCE CHARGE.  KILICO will assess an annual Records Maintenance
Charge of $25 during the Accumulation period against each contract which has
participated in one or more of the Subaccounts during the calendar year whether
or not any purchase payments have been made during the year. The imposition of
the Records Maintenance Charge will be made on December 31st of each year.
 
ANNUITY UNIT VALUE AND FIRST PERIODIC PAYMENT.  For purposes of determining the
value of an Annuity Unit and the amount of the first annuity payment, the
assumed interest rate is 4%, which is also reflected in the annuity tables
contained in the Contracts.
 
DOLLAR COST AVERAGING.  A Contract Owner may predesignate a portion of the
Contract value under a Contract attributable to General Account I, Money Market
or Government Securities Subaccount to be automatically transferred on a monthly
basis to one or more of the other Subaccounts and the General Account II. A
Contract Owner may enroll in this program at the time the Contract is issued or
any time thereafter by properly completing the Dollar Cost Averaging enrollment
form and returning it to KILICO at its home office at least five (5) business
days prior to the second Tuesday of a month which is the date that all dollar
cost averaging transfers will be made ("Transfer Date").
 
Transfers will be made in the amounts designated by the Contract Owner and must
be at least $500 per Subaccount or General Account I or II. The total Contract
Value in General Account I, the Money Market or Government Securities Subaccount
at the time Dollar Cost Averaging is elected must be at least equal to the
amount designated to be transferred on each transfer date multiplied by the
duration selection. Dollar Cost Averaging will cease automatically if the
Contract value does not equal or exceed the amount designated to be transferred
on each Transfer Date and the remaining amount will be transferred.
 
Dollar Cost Averaging will terminate when (i) the number of designated monthly
transfers has been completed, (ii) the Contract Value attributable to General
Account I, Money Market or Government Securities Subaccount is insufficient to
complete the next transfer, (iii) the Contract Owner requests termination in
writing and such writing is received by KILICO at its home office at least five
(5) days prior to the next Transfer Date in order to cancel the transfer
scheduled to take effect on such date, or (iv) the Contract is surrendered.
 
If General Account II has a balance of at least $10,000, a Contract Owner may
elect automatic calendar quarter transfers of interest accrued in General
Account II to one or more of the Subaccounts. A Contract Owner may enroll in
this program at any time by completing the proper Dollar Cost Averaging
enrollment form and returning it to KILICO at its home office at least ten (10)
days prior to the end of the calendar quarter. The transfer will occur within
five business days of the end of the calendar quarter.
 
Following the Issue Date, a Contract Owner may initiate, reinstate or change
Dollar Cost Averaging or change existing Dollar Cost Averaging terms by properly
completing the new enrollment form and returning it to KILICO at
 
                                       24
<PAGE>   28
 
its home office at least five (5) business days, ten (10) business days for
General Account II transfers prior to the next transfer Date such transfer is to
be made.
 
When utilizing Dollar Cost Averaging, a Contract owner must be invested in
either the General Account or the Money Market or Government Securities
Subaccount and be invested in a maximum of five other Subaccounts at any given
time. Election of Dollar Cost Averaging is not available during the annuity
period.
 
Systematic withdrawals may be done from General Account I or II or from any of
the Subaccounts.
 
                               LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
There are no material legal proceedings pending to which the Separate Account,
KILICO or KFS is a party. With respect to KILICO, in 1992, the Staff of the
Securities and Exchange Commission commenced an investigation into certain of
Kemper Corporation's ("Kemper's") real estate-related accounting practices and
related disclosures. KILICO's accounting and disclosure practices are consistent
with those of Kemper. Kemper fully cooperated throughout the Staff's
investigation which has now concluded. Kemper and the Staff have had settlement
discussions respecting this matter, and KILICO anticipates that this matter will
be resolved with respect to Kemper in 1995 with the filing of an administrative
proceeding.
 
             TABLE OF CONTENTS--STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
The Statement of Additional Information, Table of Contents is: Services to the
Separate Account; Performance Information of Subaccounts; State Regulation;
Experts; Report of Independent Auditors, Financial Statements of the Separate
Account, Report of Independent Auditors and Financial Statements of KILICO. The
Statement of Additional Information should be read in conjunction with this
Prospectus.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>   29
 
APPENDIX
 
KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY DEFERRED FIXED AND
VARIABLE ANNUITY IRA DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
 
This Disclosure Statement describes the statutory and regulatory provisions
applicable to the operation of Individual Retirement Annuities. Internal Revenue
Service regulations require that this be given to each person desiring to
establish an IRA.
 
A. REVOCATION
 
Within 7 days of the date you signed your enrollment application, you may revoke
it and receive back 100% of your money. To do so, wire Kemper Investors Life
Insurance Company, 1 Kemper Drive, Long Grove, Illinois 60049, or call
1-800-621-5001.
 
B. STATUTORY REQUIREMENTS
 
The provisions of this contract meet the requirements of Section 408(b) of the
Internal Revenue Code as to form for use as an IRA annuity contract described in
Items 1 through 5 below. The contract has received a favorable determination
letter from the Internal Revenue Service as to the form of the annuity. However,
this is not a determination by the IRS of the IRA's merits. If you set up an IRA
using an annuity contract it must meet the following requirements:
 
1. The amount in your IRA must be fully vested at all times.
 
2. The contract must provide that you cannot transfer it to someone else.
 
3. The contract must have flexible premiums.
 
4. You must start receiving distributions by April 1 of the year following the
year in which you reach age 70 1/2 (see "Required Distributions").
 
5. The contract must provide that you cannot contribute more than $2,000 for any
year. (This requirement does not apply to rollovers. See "Rollovers and Direct
Transfers").
 
C. ROLLOVERS AND DIRECT TRANSFERS
 
1. A rollover is a tax-free transfer of cash or other assets from one retirement
program to another. There are two kinds of rollover payments. In one, you
transfer amounts from one IRA to another. With the other, you transfer amounts
from a qualified employee benefit plan or tax-sheltered annuity to an IRA. A
rollover is an allowable payment that you cannot deduct on your tax return.
 
2. You must complete the transfer by the 60th day after the day you receive the
distribution from your IRA or other qualified employee benefit plan.
 
3. A rollover distribution from an IRA may be made to you only once a year. The
one-year period begins on the date you receive the IRA distribution, not on the
date you roll it over (reinvest it) into another IRA.
 
4. A direct transfer of funds in an IRA from one trustee or insurance company to
another is not a rollover. It is a transfer that is not affected by the one-year
waiting period.
 
5. All or a part of the premium for this contract may be paid from a rollover
from an IRA, qualified pension or profit-sharing plan or tax-sheltered annuity,
or from a direct transfer from another IRA. The proceeds from this contract may
be used as a rollover contribution to another IRA.
 
6. Beginning January 1, 1993, a distribution that is eligible for rollover
treatment from a qualified employee benefit plan or tax-sheltered annuity will
be subject to 20% withholding by the Internal Revenue Service even if you roll
the distribution over to an IRA within the 60-day rollover period. To avoid
withholding, the distribution should be made as a direct transfer to the IRA
trustee or insurance company.
 
D. ALLOWANCE OF DEDUCTION
 
1. In general, the amount you can contribute each year is the lesser of $2,000
or your taxable compensation for the year. If you have more than one IRA, the
limit applies to the total contributions made to your own IRAs for the year.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>   30
 
Generally, if you work the amount that you earn is compensation. Wages,
salaries, tips, professional fees, bonuses and other amounts you receive for
providing personal services are compensation. If you own and operate your own
business as a sole proprietor, your net earnings reduced by your deductible
contributions on your behalf to self-employed retirement plans is compensation.
If you are an active partner in a partnership and provide services to the
partnership, your share of partnership income reduced by deductible
contributions made on your behalf to self-employed retirement plans is
compensation. All taxable alimony and separate maintenance payments received
under a decree of divorce or separate maintenance is compensation.
 
2. If neither you nor your spouse are covered for any part of the year by an
employer retirement plan, you can deduct the lesser of $2,000 or your taxable
compensation. If either you or your spouse are covered by a retirement plan at
work, the $2,000 limit is reduced $10 for each $50 that your adjusted gross
income exceeds $40,000 (married filing jointly), $25,000 (single) or zero
(married filing separately).
 
3. Contributions to your IRA can be made at any time. If you make the
contribution between January 1 and April 15, however, you may elect to treat the
contribution as made either in that year or in the preceding year. You may file
a tax return claiming deduction for your IRA contribution before the
contribution is actually made. You must, however, make the contribution by the
due date of your return not including extensions.
 
4. You cannot make a contribution other than a rollover contribution to your IRA
for the year in which you reach age 70 1/2 or thereafter.
 
5. If both you and your spouse have compensation, you can each set up your own
IRA. The contribution for each of you is figured separately and depends on how
much each earns. Both of you cannot participate in the same IRA account or
contract.
 
6. If you file a joint return, you can contribute up to the lesser of $2,000 or
your taxable compensation to an IRA for a spouse who has not reached age 70 1/2
(even if you have reached age 70 1/2) and who has no compensation or elects to
be treated as having no compensation for the year. The total combined amount you
can contribute each year to your own IRA and the spousal IRA is the lesser of
$2,250 or your taxable compensation for the year.
 
7. If neither you nor your spouse are covered for any part of the year by an
employer retirement plan, you can deduct the lesser of $2,250 or your taxable
compensation. If you or your spouse is covered by a retirement plan, the $2,250
limit is reduced $10 for each $44.44 that your adjusted gross income exceeds
$40,000.
 
E. SEP-IRA'S
 
1. The maximum deductible contribution for a Simplified Employee Pension (SEP)
IRA is the lesser of $30,000 or 15% of compensation.
 
2. A SEP must be established and maintained by an employer (corporation,
partnership, sole proprietor). Information about the Kemper SEP is available
upon request.
 
F. TAX STATUS OF THE CONTRACT AND DISTRIBUTIONS
 
1. Earnings of your IRA annuity contract are not taxed until they are
distributed to you.
 
2. In general, taxable distributions are included in your gross income in the
year you receive them.
 
3. Distributions are non-taxable to the extent they represent a return of
non-deductible contributions. The non-taxable percentage of a distribution is
determined by dividing your total undistributed, non-deductible IRA
contributions by the value of all your IRAs (including SEPs and rollovers).
 
4. You cannot choose the special five-year or ten-year averaging that may apply
to lump sum distributions from qualified employer plans.
 
G. REQUIRED DISTRIBUTIONS
 
You must start receiving minimum distributions from your IRA starting with the
year you reach age 70 1/2 (your 70 1/2 year). Ordinarily, you must receive the
minimum distribution for any year by December 31. However, you may delay the
minimum distribution for your 70 1/2 year until April 1 of the following year.
 
Figure your required minimum distribution for each year by dividing the value of
your IRA as of the close of business on December 31 of the preceding year by the
applicable life expectancy. The applicable life expectancy is your remaining
life expectancy or the remaining joint life and last survivor expectancy of you
and your designated
 
                                       27
<PAGE>   31
 
beneficiary. Life expectancies are determined using the expected return multiple
tables shown in IRS Publication 590 "Individual Retirement Arrangements." If a
designated beneficiary is more than 10 years younger than you, that beneficiary
is assumed to be exactly 10 years younger. To obtain a free copy of IRS
Publication 590 and other IRS forms, phone the IRS toll free at 1-800-829-3676
or write the IRS Forms Distribution Center for your area as shown in your income
tax return instructions.
 
Annuity payments which begin by April 1 of the year following your 70 1/2 year
satisfy the minimum distribution requirement if they provide for non-increasing
payments over the life or the lives of you and your spouse, provided that, if
installments are guaranteed, the guaranty period does not exceed the lesser of
20 years or the applicable life expectancy.
 
If you have more than one IRA, you must determine the required minimum
distribution separately for each IRA; however, you can total up these minimum
amounts and take the total from any one or more of the IRAs.
 
If the actual distribution from your IRA during a year after you die or reach
age 70 1/2 is less than the minimum amount that should be distributed in
accordance with the rules set forth at Items 5, 6 and 7 above, the difference is
an excess accumulation. There is a 50% excise tax on any excess accumulations.
However, if you have a good reason for having an excess accumulation in your IRA
you may not have to pay the tax. For example, if you have been given wrong
advice or you made a mistake in using or did not understand the excess
accumulation rules, you may request the IRS to excuse the tax.
 
H. TAX ON EXCESS CONTRIBUTIONS
 
1. You must pay a 6% excise tax each year on excess contributions that remain in
your IRA. Generally, an excess contribution is the amount contributed to your
IRA that is more than you can contribute or roll over. The excess is taxed for
the year of the excess contribution and for each year after that until you
correct it.
 
2. You will not have to pay the 6% excise tax if you withdraw the excess amount
by the date your tax return is due including extensions for the year of the
contribution. You do not have to include in your gross income an excess
contribution that you withdraw from your IRA before your tax return is due if
the income earned on the excess was also withdrawn and no deduction was allowed
for the excess contribution.
 
3. If an excess contribution in your IRA is a result of a rollover and the
excess occurred because information required to be supplied by the payor of the
distribution was incorrect, you may withdraw the excess amount attributable to
the incorrect information after the date your return is due and still not
include the amount withdrawn in your gross income. It is not necessary to
withdraw the income earned on the excess. You will, however, have to pay the 6%
tax on the excess amount for each year the excess contribution was in the IRA at
the end of the year.
 
I. TAX ON PREMATURE DISTRIBUTIONS
 
There is an additional tax on premature distributions equal to 10% of the amount
of the premature distribution that you must include in your gross income.
Premature distributions are generally amounts you withdraw from your IRA before
you are age 59 1/2. However, the tax on premature distributions does not apply:
 
1. To amounts that are rolled over tax free.
 
2. To a series of substantially equal periodic payments made over your life or
life expectancy, or the joint life or life expectancy of you and your
beneficiary.
 
3. If you are permanently disabled. You are considered disabled if you cannot do
any substantial gainful activity because of your physical or mental condition. A
physician must determine that the condition has lasted or can be expected to
last continuously for 12 months or more or that the condition can be expected to
lead to death.
 
J. IRA EXCISE TAX REPORTING
 
Use Form 5329, Return for Individual Retirement Arrangement Taxes, to report the
excise taxes on excess contributions, premature distributions, and excess
accumulations. If you do not owe any IRA excise taxes, you do not need Form
5329. Further information can be obtained from any district office of the
Internal Revenue Service.
 
                                       28
<PAGE>   32
 
K. BORROWING
 
If you borrow money against your IRA contract or use it as security for a loan,
you must include in gross income the fair market value of the IRA contract as of
the first day of your tax year. (Note: This contract does not allow borrowings
against it, nor may it be assigned or pledged as collateral for a loan.)
 
L. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE
 
1. If this is a regular contribution IRA, the following information, based on
the charts shown at the back of this form, which assumes you were to make a
level contribution to the fixed account at the beginning of each year of $1,000,
must be completed prior to your signing the enrollment application.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
END
OF               LUMP SUM TERMINATION               AT               LUMP SUM TERMINATION
YEAR              VALUE OF CONTRACT *              AGE               VALUE OF CONTRACT *
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                <C>                            <C>               <C>
   1                                                60
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2                                                65
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   3                                                70
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   4
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   5
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
* Includes applicable withdrawal charges as described in Item M below.
 
2. If this is a rollover IRA, the following information, based on the charts
shown at the back of this form, and all of which assumes you make one
contribution to the fixed account of $1,000 at the beginning of this year, must
be completed prior to your signing the enrollment application.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
END
OF               LUMP SUM TERMINATION               AT               LUMP SUM TERMINATION
YEAR              VALUE OF CONTRACT *              AGE               VALUE OF CONTRACT *
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                <C>                            <C>               <C>
   1                                                60
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2                                                65
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   3                                                70
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   4
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   5
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
* Includes applicable withdrawal charges as described in Item M below.
 
M. FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE FOR THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT (VARIABLE ACCOUNT)
 
1. If on the enrollment application you indicated an allocation to a Subaccount,
this contract will be assessed a daily charge of an amount which will equal an
aggregate of 1.30% per annum for Periodic Payment Contracts.
 
2. An annual records maintenance charge of $36.00 will be assessed ratably each
quarter against the Separate Account value, if you have participated in a
Subaccount during the year. If insufficient values are in the Subaccounts when
the charge is assessed, the charge will be assessed against General Account
value.
 
3. Withdrawal (early annuitization) charges as follows will be assessed based on
the years elapsed since purchase payments (in a given contract year) were
received by the Company; under 1 year, 6%; over 1 to 2 years, 5%; over 2 to 3
years, 4%; over 3 to 4 years, 3%; over 4 to 5 years, 2%; over 5 to 6 years, 1%;
6th year and thereafter, 0%.
 
4. The method used to compute and allocate the annual earnings is contained in
the prospectus under the heading "Accumulation Unit Value."
 
5. The growth in value of your contract is neither guaranteed nor projected but
is based on the investment experience of the Separate Account.
 
                                       29
<PAGE>   33
 
GUARANTEED LUMP SUM TERMINATION OF DEFERRED FIXED AND VARIABLE ANNUITY
COMPLETELY ALLOCATED TO THE GENERAL ACCOUNT WITH 3% GUARANTEED EACH YEAR.
(TERMINATION VALUES ARE BASED ON $1,000 ANNUAL CONTRIBUTIONS AT THE BEGINNING OF
EACH YEAR.)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
END OF    TERMINATION     END OF    TERMINATION     END OF    TERMINATION     END OF    TERMINATION
 YEAR       VALUES*        YEAR       VALUES*        YEAR       VALUES*        YEAR       VALUES*
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>       <C>             <C>       <C>             <C>       <C>             <C>       <C>
   1        $ 1,000         14        $17,371         27        $41,703         40       $  77,436
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2          2,000         15         18,929         28         43,991         41          80,796
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   3          3,038         16         20,534         29         46,348         42          84,256
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   4          4,130         17         22,187         30         48,775         43          87,821
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   5          5,264         18         23,889         31         51,275         44          91,492
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   6          6,442         19         25,643         32         53,850         45          95,274
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   7          7,665         20         27,449         33         56,503         46          99,169
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   8          8,932         21         29,309         34         59,235         47         103,181
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   9         10,236         22         31,225         35         62,048         48         107,313
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  10         11,580         23         33,199         36         64,947         49         111,569
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  11         12,965         24         35,232         37         67,932         50         115,953
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  12         14,390         25         37,326         38         71,007
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  13         15,859         26         39,482         39         74,174
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
GUARANTEED LUMP SUM TERMINATION OF DEFERRED FIXED AND VARIABLE ANNUITY
COMPLETELY ALLOCATED TO THE GENERAL ACCOUNT WITH 3% GUARANTEED EACH YEAR.
(TERMINATION VALUES ARE BASED ON $1,000 SINGLE PREMIUM.)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
END OF    TERMINATION     END OF    TERMINATION     END OF    TERMINATION     END OF    TERMINATION
 YEAR       VALUES*        YEAR       VALUES*        YEAR       VALUES*        YEAR       VALUES*
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>       <C>             <C>       <C>             <C>       <C>             <C>       <C>
   1        $ 1,000         14        $ 1,513         27        $ 2,221         40        $ 3,262
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   2          1,013         15          1,558         28          2,288         41          3,360
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   3          1,053         16          1,605         29          2,357         42          3,461
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   4          1,095         17          1,653         30          2,427         43          3,565
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   5          1,138         18          1,702         31          2,500         44          3,671
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   6          1,183         19          1,754         32          2,575         45          3,782
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   7          1,230         20          1,806         33          2,652         46          3,895
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   8          1,267         21          1,860         34          2,732         47          4,012
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
   9          1,305         22          1,916         35          2,814         48          4,132
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  10          1,344         23          1,974         36          2,898         49          4,256
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  11          1,384         24          2,033         37          2,985         50          4,384
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  12          1,426         25          2,094         38          3,075
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  13          1,469         26          2,157         39          3,167
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
* Includes applicable withdrawal charges.
 
                                       30
<PAGE>   34
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                        <C>
Summary..................................     2
Financial Highlights.....................     3
Investment Objectives, Policies and Risk
  Factors................................     7
Investment Techniques....................    16
Net Asset Value..........................    20
Purchase and Redemption..................    21
Dividends and Taxes......................    22
Capital Structure and General
  Information............................    22
Investment Manager.......................    23
Distributor..............................    25
Appendix.................................    26
</TABLE>
 
This prospectus contains information about the Fund that you should know before
investing and should be retained for future reference. A Statement of Additional
Information dated May 1, 1995, has been filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and is incorporated herein by reference. It is available upon request
without charge from the Fund at the address or telephone number shown above.
 
AN INVESTMENT IN THE MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO IS NEITHER INSURED NOR GUARANTEED BY
THE U.S. GOVERNMENT. THERE CAN BE NO ASSURANCE THAT THE PORTFOLIO WILL BE ABLE
TO MAINTAIN A STABLE NET ASSET VALUE OF $1.00 PER SHARE.
 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION NOR HAS THE COMMISSION PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY
OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
 
                                     KEMPER
                                   INVESTORS
                                      FUND
 
                             PROSPECTUS MAY 1, 1995
 
                             KEMPER INVESTORS FUND
                            120 SOUTH LASALLE STREET
                            CHICAGO, ILLINOIS 60603
                                 1-800-621-1048
 
Kemper Investors Fund (the "Fund") offers a choice of seven investment
portfolios to investors applying for certain variable life insurance and
variable annuity contracts offered by Participating Insurance Companies.
 
    The seven investment portfolios are:
 
           MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO
           TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO
           HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO
           EQUITY PORTFOLIO
           GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO
           INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO
           SMALL CAPITALIZATION EQUITY PORTFOLIO
 
Shares of the Portfolios are available exclusively as pooled funding vehicles
for the variable life insurance and variable annuity contracts of Participating
Insurance Companies.
<PAGE>   35
 
                                    SUMMARY
 
FUND INVESTMENT CONCEPT. Kemper Investors Fund (the "Fund") is an open-end
management investment company established on March 24, 1987 as a Massachusetts
business trust. The Fund is a series fund consisting of seven portfolios
("Portfolios"): Money Market, Total Return, High Yield, Equity, Government
Securities, International and Small Capitalization Equity ("Small Cap").
Additional Portfolios may be created from time to time. The Fund is the funding
vehicle for variable life insurance contracts ("VLI contracts") and variable
annuity contracts ("VA contracts") offered by the separate accounts of certain
life insurance companies ("Participating Insurance Companies"). The Fund
currently does not foresee any disadvantages to the holders of VLI contracts and
VA contracts arising from the fact that the interests of the holders of such
contracts may differ. Nevertheless, the Fund's Trustees intend to monitor events
in order to identify any material irreconcilable conflicts that may arise and to
determine what action, if any, should be taken. The VLI contracts and VA
contracts are described in the separate prospectuses issued by the Participating
Insurance Companies. The Fund assumes no responsibility for such prospectuses.
 
Individual VLI contract holders and VA contract holders are not the
"shareholders" of the Fund. Rather, the Participating Insurance Companies and
their separate accounts are the shareholders or investors (the "Shareholders"),
although such companies may pass through voting rights to their VLI and VA
contract holders.
 
INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES. The Money Market Portfolio seeks maximum current income
to the extent consistent with stability of principal from a portfolio of high
quality money market instruments. The Total Return Portfolio seeks a high total
return, a combination of income and capital appreciation, by investing in a
combination of debt securities and common stocks. The High Yield Portfolio seeks
to provide a high level of current income by investing in fixed-income
securities. The Equity Portfolio seeks maximum appreciation of capital through
diversification of investment securities having potential for capital
appreciation. The Government Securities Portfolio seeks high current return
consistent with preservation of capital from a portfolio composed primarily of
U.S. Government securities. The International Portfolio seeks total return, a
combination of capital growth and income, principally through an internationally
diversified portfolio of equity securities. The Small Cap Portfolio seeks
maximum appreciation of investors' capital. All portfolios except the Money
Market Portfolio may engage in options and financial futures transactions. The
Total Return, High Yield, Equity and Small Cap Portfolios each may invest a
portion of its assets in foreign securities and engage in related foreign
currency transactions. The International Portfolio will invest a substantial
portion of its assets in foreign securities and engage in related foreign
currency transactions. Foreign securities may include investments in developing
countries. The High Yield Portfolio will, and the Total Return and Government
Securities Portfolios may, invest in high yield (high risk) bonds. All of the
Portfolios are diversified. See "Investment Objectives, Policies and Risk
Factors."
 
RISK FACTORS. There is no assurance that the investment objective of any
Portfolio will be achieved and investment in each Portfolio includes risks that
vary in kind and degree depending upon the investment policies of the Portfolio.
The returns and net asset value of a Portfolio will fluctuate (except that the
Money Market Portfolio seeks to maintain a net asset value of $1.00 per share).
Investors should note that investments in high yield securities by certain
portfolios (principally the Total Return and High Yield Portfolios) entail
relatively greater risk of loss of income and principal than investments in
higher rated securities; and market prices of high yield securities may
fluctuate more than market prices of higher rated securities. The government
guarantee of the U.S. Government securities in which the Government Securities
Portfolio may invest does not guarantee the market value of the shares of the
Portfolio. Normally the value of investments in U.S. Government securities
varies inversely with changes in interest rates. Foreign investments by certain
Portfolios (principally the International Portfolio) involve risk and
opportunity considerations not typically associated with investing in U.S.
companies. The return of such a Portfolio can be adversely affected by changes
in currency exchange rates. Investment by the Small Cap Portfolio primarily in
smaller companies involves greater risk than investment in larger, more
established companies. There are special risks associated with options,
financial futures and foreign currency transactions and there is no assurance
that use of those investment techniques will be successful. Some of the
Portfolios may experience high portfolio turnover which would involve
correspondingly greater brokerage commissions or other transaction costs. See
"Investment Objectives, Policies and Risk Factors."
 
PURCHASES AND REDEMPTIONS. The separate accounts of the Participating Insurance
Companies place orders to purchase and redeem shares of each Portfolio based on,
among other things, the amount of premium payments to be invested and surrender
and transfer requests to be effected on that date pursuant to VLI and VA
contracts. See "Purchase and Redemption."
 
INVESTMENT MANAGER. Kemper Financial Services, Inc. ("KFS" or "investment
manager") serves as investment manager for each of the Portfolios at an
effective annual rate, payable monthly, of .50%, .55%, .60%, .60%, .55%, .75%
and .65% of average daily net assets of the Money Market, Total Return, High
Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and Small Cap Portfolios,
respectively. See "Investment Manager."
 
GENERAL INFORMATION AND CAPITAL. Since the Fund offers multiple Portfolios, it
is known as a "series company." Shares of each Portfolio have equal
non-cumulative voting rights and equal rights with respect to dividends, assets
and liquidation of such Portfolio. Each Portfolio has its own objective,
policies and restrictions. The Fund is not required to hold annual shareholder
meetings, but will hold special shareholder meetings as required or deemed
desirable. See "Capital Structure and General Information."
 
                                        2
<PAGE>   36
 
                              FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
 
The tables below show financial information for each Portfolio expressed in
terms of one share outstanding throughout the period. The information for the
Money Market, Total Return, High Yield and Equity Portfolios for fiscal periods
prior to 1990 reflects the operations of certain Separate Accounts as discussed
under "Capital Structure and General Information." The information in the tables
for the years ended December 31, 1990 through 1994 is covered by the report of
the Fund's independent auditors. The report is contained in the Fund's
Registration Statement and is available from the Fund. The financial statements
contained in the Fund's 1994 Annual Report to Shareholders are incorporated
herein by reference and may be obtained by writing or calling the Fund.
 
MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               Year ended December 31,
                      1994         1993       1992       1991       1990       1989       1988       1987       1986       1985
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                   <C>          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
  PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
  beginning of year     $1.00        1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment
  income and
  dividends
  declared                .04         .03        .03        .06        .08        .09        .07        .06        .06        .08
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value,
  end of year           $1.00        1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00       1.00
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL RETURN (%)         3.96        2.83       3.43       5.89       8.08       9.11       7.47       6.58       6.61       8.13
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE
  NET ASSETS (%):
Expenses                  .53         .56        .57        .56        .58        .57        .56        .55        .56        .58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment
  income                 3.95        2.79       3.38       5.80       7.78       8.75       7.19       6.43       6.44       7.86
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end
  of year (in
  thousands)          $83,821      68,177     75,270     76,479     95,759     78,683     80,362     92,130     83,793     96,270
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
NOTE TO MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO:
 
The total return for 1994 includes the effect of a capital contribution from the
investment manager. Without the capital contribution, the total return would
have been 3.47%.
 
TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               Year ended December 31,
                      1994         1993       1992       1991       1990       1989       1988       1987       1986       1985
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                   <C>          <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
  PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
  beginning of year    $2.586       2.473      2.658      2.071      2.021      1.707      1.605      1.661      1.496      1.214
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from
  investment
  operations:
  Net investment
    income               .069        .069       .061       .080       .113       .102       .086       .075       .060       .057
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net realized and
    unrealized gain
    (loss) on
    investments         (.313)       .214      (.026)      .677      (.013)      .298       .102      (.056)      .165       .282
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total from
  investment
  operations            (.244)       .283       .035       .757       .100       .400       .188       .019       .225       .339
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends:
  Distributions
    from net
    investment
    income               .060        .050       .080       .110       .020       .086       .086       .075       .060       .057
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distributions
    from net
    realized gain
    on investments       .168        .120       .140       .060       .030         --         --         --         --         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distributions in
    excess of net
    realized gain
    on investments       .002          --         --         --         --         --         --         --         --         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends          .230        .170       .220       .170       .050       .086       .086       .075       .060       .057
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value,
  end of year          $2.112       2.586      2.473      2.658      2.071      2.021      1.707      1.605      1.661      1.496
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL RETURN (%)        (9.50)      12.13       1.69      37.90       5.04      24.16      11.98        .62      15.13      28.42
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE
  NET ASSETS (%):
Expenses                  .61         .59        .60        .61        .61        .58        .61        .58        .60        .66
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment
  income                 3.13        3.19       3.41       3.46       5.94       5.43       5.19       4.04       3.59       4.23
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end
  of year (in
  thousands)        $ 586,594     643,830    528,007    412,772    272,747    262,652    206,262    214,203    146,324    103,249
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover
  rate (%)                128         191        160        187        139        102        152        129        136        117
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
                                        3
<PAGE>   37
 
HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Year ended December 31,
                            1994        1993        1992       1991      1990      1989       1988      1987      1986      1985
                            -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                       <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
  PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value,
  beginning of year          $1.338       1.209      1.144       .914    1.122      1.258      1.225    1.290      1.226    1.143
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from investment
  operations:
  Net investment income        .116        .120       .125       .140     .170       .151       .152     .139       .142     .150
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net realized and
    unrealized gain
    (loss) on investments     (.149)       .109       .070       .300    (.338)     (.163)      .033    (.065)      .064     .083
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total from investment
  operations                  (.033)       .229       .195       .440    (.168)     (.012)      .185     .074       .206     .233
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends from net
  investment income            .120        .100       .130       .210     .040       .124       .152     .139       .142     .150
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of
  year                       $1.185       1.338      1.209      1.144     .914      1.122      1.258    1.225      1.290    1.226
=================================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN (%)              (2.25)      20.00      17.76      51.83   (15.45)     (1.22)     15.66     5.82      17.63    21.58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET
  ASSETS (%):
Expenses                        .65         .63        .64        .67      .68        .63        .66      .62        .66      .69
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income          9.49        9.54      10.44      12.95    16.27      12.50      11.98    10.81      11.06    12.56
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end of year
  (in thousands)          $ 219,415     233,964    162,158    121,608   88,566    150,674    138,461   95,502    143,605   71,282
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate
  (%)                            98          84         57         31       28         81         52      122        158      130
=================================================================================================================================
</TABLE>
 

 
EQUITY PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     Year ended December 31,
                                  1994        1993        1992       1991      1990     1989     1988     1987     1986     1985
                                 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                             <C>         <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING
  PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of
  year                             $2.935       2.631      2.642      1.681    1.692    1.348    1.374    1.377    1.283    1.058
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from investment
  operations:
  Net investment income              .018        .004       .007       .017     .032     .039     .032     .030     .024     .036
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net realized and unrealized
    gain (loss) on investments      (.138)       .370       .082       .974    (.023)    .338    (.026)   (.003)    .094     .225
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total from investment
  operations                        (.120)       .374       .089       .991     .009     .377     .006     .027     .118     .261
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends:
  Distributions from net
    investment income                  --        .010       .005       .030     .010     .033     .032     .030     .024     .036
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distributions from net
    realized gain on
    investments                      .150        .060       .095         --     .010       --       --       --       --       --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends                      .150        .070       .100       .030     .020     .033     .032     .030     .024     .036
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year       $2.665       2.935      2.631      2.642    1.681    1.692    1.348    1.374    1.377    1.283
=================================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN (%)                    (4.02)      14.63       3.57      59.47     0.60    27.87      .40     1.67     9.10    25.08
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS
  (%):
Expenses                              .66         .64        .64        .67      .68      .70      .71      .64      .70      .72
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                 .69         .30        .65        .83     2.23     2.49     2.34     1.85     1.82     3.11
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end of year (in
  thousands)                    $ 321,708     284,461    203,624    118,983   61,621   51,961   45,833   46,474   30,228   45,913
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate (%)           106          78         78        106      135       93      301      165      262       95
=================================================================================================================================
</TABLE>
 
 
                                        4
<PAGE>   38
 
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             Year ended December 31,
                                                  1994       1993       1992      1991     1990(a)    1989(a)    1988     1987(c)
                                                  -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                              <C>        <C>        <C>       <C>       <C>        <C>        <C>      <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of year                $1.267      1.277     1.287     1.175      1.091      1.053    1.020      1.000
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from investment operations:
  Net investment income                             .067       .060      .064      .090       .093       .092     .089         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on
    investments                                    (.102)      .020      .006      .082       .011       .036    (.056)      .020
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total from investment operations                   (.035)      .080      .070      .172       .104       .128     .033       .020
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends:
  Distributions from net investment income          .060       .060      .050      .060       .020       .090       --         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distributions from net realized gain on
    investments                                     .024       .030      .030        --         --         --       --         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distributions in excess of net realized gain
    on investments                                  .006         --        --        --         --         --       --         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends                                     .090       .090      .080      .060       .020       .090       --         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of year                      $1.142      1.267     1.277     1.287      1.175      1.091    1.053      1.020
=================================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN (%)                                   (2.74)      6.48      5.90     15.22       9.81      13.14     3.27         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS (%):
Expenses                                             .63        .60       .61       .63        .58        .53     1.81       --(b)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                               5.69       5.05      6.08      7.42       8.48       8.73     7.94       --(b)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end of year (in thousands)         $95,782    121,912    98,814    59,064     31,929     14,878    1,170        311
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                          606        534       492       141        174         28       25         --
=================================================================================================================================
</TABLE>
 
NOTES TO GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO:
 
(a) KFS waived its investment management fee from March 1, 1989 to March 1,
    1990. Absent this waiver, the ratio of expenses to average net assets and
    the ratio of net investment income to average net assets would have been
    1.04% and 8.22%, respectively, in 1989 and .66% and 8.40%, respectively, in
    1990.
(b) Because of the short start-up period from the Government Securities
    Portfolio's initial public offering to December 31, 1987, ratios of expenses
    and net investment income to average net assets for 1987 are not meaningful.
(c) For the period from September 3, 1987 (inception) through December 31, 1987.
 
INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                      Year ended
                                                                                                     December 31,
                                                                                                  -------------------
                                                                                                    1994        1993      1992(a)
                                                                                                  --------     ------     -------
<S>                                                                                               <C>          <C>        <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of period                                                                $1.306       .993      1.000
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from investment operations:
  Net investment income                                                                               .009       .010       .010
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net realized and unrealized gain (loss) on investments                                             (.056)      .313      (.017 )
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total from investment operations                                                                     (.047)      .323      (.007 )
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Less dividends:
  Distributions from net investment income                                                              --       .009         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Distributions from net realized gain on investments                                                 .015       .001         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total dividends                                                                                       .015       .010         --
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of period                                                                      $1.244      1.306       .993
=================================================================================================================================
TOTAL RETURN (%)                                                                                     (3.59)     32.83       (.72 )
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS (%):
Expenses                                                                                               .93        .92       1.11
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                                                                  .74        .86       1.01
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end of period (in thousands)                                                        $122,710     88,880     19,447
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                                            107        116        129
=================================================================================================================================
</TABLE>
 
NOTE TO INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO:
 
(a) For the period from January 6, 1992 (inception) through December 31, 1992.
 
                                        5
<PAGE>   39
 
SMALL CAPITALIZATION EQUITY PORTFOLIO
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                             December 31, 1994(a)
                                                                                                             --------------------
<S>                                                                                                          <C>
PER SHARE OPERATING PERFORMANCE:
Net asset value, beginning of period                                                                                 $1.000
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income from investment operations:
  Net investment income                                                                                                .008
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Net realized and unrealized gain on investments                                                                      .031
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total from investment operations                                                                                       .039
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value, end of period                                                                                       $1.039
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL RETURN (%)                                                                                                       3.95
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RATIOS TO AVERAGE NET ASSETS (%):
Expenses                                                                                                               1.25
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net investment income                                                                                                   .91
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SUPPLEMENTAL DATA:
Net assets at end of period (in thousands)                                                                          $12,909
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Portfolio turnover rate (%)                                                                                              58
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
</TABLE>
 
NOTE TO SMALL CAPITALIZATION EQUITY PORTFOLIO:
 
(a) For the period from May 2, 1994 (inception) through December 31, 1994.
 
NOTE:
 
Ratios for all Portfolios have been determined on an annualized basis. Total
return is not annualized.
 
                                        6
<PAGE>   40
 
                INVESTMENT OBJECTIVES, POLICIES AND RISK FACTORS
 
The Fund has adopted for each Portfolio certain fundamental investment
restrictions which, together with the investment objective and policies, cannot
be changed with respect to a Portfolio without approval by holders of a majority
of the outstanding voting shares as defined in the Investment Company Act of
1940 ("1940 Act"). See "Investment Restrictions" in the Statement of Additional
Information.
 
Each Portfolio has a different investment objective which it pursues through
separate investment policies, as described below. The differences in objectives
and policies among the Portfolios can be expected to affect the degree of market
and financial risk to which each Portfolio is subject and the return of each
Portfolio. There are market risks in any investment and therefore there can be
no assurance that the objective of any Portfolio will be achieved. The actual
return of a holder of a variable life or variable annuity contract will be
affected by charges imposed by the separate accounts of Participating Insurance
Companies.
 
MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO. The Money Market Portfolio seeks maximum current income
to the extent consistent with stability of principal from a portfolio of the
following types of U.S. Dollar denominated money market instruments that mature
in twelve months or less:
 
     1. Obligations of, or guaranteed by, the U.S. or Canadian Governments,
     their agencies or instrumentalities. The two broad categories of U.S.
     Government debt instruments are: (a) direct obligations of the U.S.
     Treasury and (b) securities issued or guaranteed by agencies and
     instrumentalities of the U.S. Government. Some obligations issued or
     guaranteed by agencies or instrumentalities of the U.S. Government are
     backed by the full faith and credit of the United States and others are
     backed exclusively by the agency or instrumentality with limited rights of
     the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury.
 
     2. Bank certificates of deposit, time deposits or bankers' acceptances
     limited to U.S. banks or Canadian chartered banks having total assets in
     excess of $1 billion.
 
     3. Bank certificates of deposit, time deposits or bankers' acceptances of
     U.S. branches of foreign banks having total assets in excess of $10
     billion.
 
     4. Commercial paper rated Prime-1 or Prime-2 by Moody's Investors Service,
     Inc. ("Moody's") or A-1 or A-2 by Standard & Poor's Corporation ("S&P"), or
     commercial paper or notes of comparable quality, such as are issued by
     companies with an unsecured debt issue outstanding currently rated A or
     higher by Moody's or S&P where the obligation is on the same or a higher
     level of priority as the rated issue, and investments in other corporate
     obligations such as publicly traded bonds, debentures and notes rated A or
     higher by Moody's or S&P. See "Appendix--Ratings of Investments" in the
     Statement of Additional Information for a description of the ratings.
 
     5. Repurchase agreements of obligations which are suitable for investment
     under the categories set forth above. Repurchase agreements are discussed
     under "Investment Techniques--Repurchase Agreements."
 
In addition, the Money Market Portfolio limits its portfolio investments to
securities that meet the quality and diversification requirements of Rule 2a-7
of the 1940 Act. See "Net Asset Value."
 
To the extent the Money Market Portfolio purchases Eurodollar certificates of
deposit issued by London branches of U.S. banks, or commercial paper issued by
foreign entities, consideration will be given to their marketability, possible
restrictions on international currency transactions and to regulations imposed
by the domicile country of the foreign issuer. Eurodollar certificates of
deposit may not be subject to the same regulatory requirements as certificates
issued by U.S. banks and associated income may be subject to the imposition of
foreign taxes. The Money Market Portfolio will normally invest at least 25% of
its net assets in instruments issued by domestic or foreign banks.
 
The Money Market Portfolio seeks to maintain its net asset value at $1.00 per
share by valuing its portfolio of investments on the amortized cost method in
accordance with Rule 2a-7 of the 1940 Act. See "Net Asset Value." While the
Portfolio will make every effort to maintain a fixed net asset value at $1.00
per share, there can be no assurance that this objective will be achieved.
 
The Money Market Portfolio may invest in instruments that bear rates of interest
that are adjusted periodically or that "float" continuously according to
formulae intended to minimize fluctuations in values of the instruments
("Variable Rate Securities"). The Fund determines the maturity of Variable Rate
Securities in accordance with Securities and Exchange Commission ("SEC") rules
that allow the Fund to consider certain of such instruments as having maturities
earlier than the maturity date on the instrument.
 
TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO. The Total Return Portfolio seeks a high total return, a
combination of income and capital appreciation, by investing in a combination of
debt securities and common stocks. The Portfolio's investments will
 
                                        7
<PAGE>   41
 
normally consist of domestic and foreign fixed income and equity securities.
Fixed income securities will include bonds, money market instruments (including
repurchase agreements) and other debt securities (such as U.S. and foreign
government securities and investment grade and high yield corporate obligations)
and preferred stocks, some of which may have a call on common stocks through
attached warrants or a conversion privilege. The Portfolio may invest in fixed
income securities that are in the lower rating categories and those that are
non-rated (sometimes called "junk bonds"). The characteristics of the rating
categories are described in "Appendix--Ratings of Investments" in the Statement
of Additional Information. For a discussion of lower rated and non-rated
securities and related risks, see "High Yield Portfolio" and "Special Risk
Factors--High Yield (High Risk) Bonds" below. Equity investments normally will
consist of common stocks and securities convertible into or exchangeable for
common stocks; however, the Portfolio may also make private placement
investments (which are normally restricted securities). For a further
description of equity securities, see "Equity Portfolio" below. The percentage
of assets invested in specific categories of fixed-income and equity securities
will vary from time to time depending upon the judgment of the investment
manager as to general market and economic conditions, trends in yields and
interest rates, and changes in fiscal or monetary policies.
 
The Portfolio does not make investments for short-term profits nor does it have
a separate portfolio turnover policy for equity and fixed income segments of its
portfolio. The Portfolio is not restricted in policy with regard to portfolio
turnover and will make changes in its investment portfolio from time to time as
business and economic conditions or market prices may dictate and as its
investment policy may require.
 
The Portfolio may write and purchase put and call options traded on national
securities exchanges or over-the-counter, including options on securities
indices. The Portfolio may also engage in financial futures transactions and may
purchase foreign securities and engage in related foreign currency transactions.
The Portfolio may purchase or sell portfolio securities on a when-issued or
delayed delivery basis. See "Special Risk Factors--Foreign Securities" and
"Investment Techniques."
 
HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO. The High Yield Portfolio seeks to provide a high level of
current income by investing in fixed income securities. Fixed income obligations
include corporate debt securities, U.S. and Canadian Government securities,
obligations of U.S. and Canadian banking institutions, convertible securities,
assignments or participations in loans, preferred stock, and cash and cash
equivalents, including repurchase agreements.
 
The fixed income securities purchased by the Portfolio may include those in the
lower rating categories of the established rating services and those that are
non-rated (sometimes called "junk bonds"). Investments in such securities entail
relatively greater risk of loss of income or principal than investments in
higher rated securities; market prices may fluctuate more than market prices of
higher rated securities. See "Special Risk Factors--High Yield Bonds (High
Risk)" below for a discussion of such risks. These fixed income securities (debt
and preferred stock issues, including convertibles) normally offer a current
yield or yield to maturity that is significantly higher than the yield available
from securities rated in the four highest categories assigned by Moody's or S&P.
See "Appendix--Ratings of Investments" in the Statement of Additional
Information for a description of Moody's and S&P ratings.
 
The average maturity and the mix of investments of the Portfolio will vary as
the investment manager seeks to provide a high level of income considering the
available alternatives in the market. See "Appendix--Portfolio Composition of
High Yield Bonds" in this prospectus. Since interest rates vary with changes in
economic, market, political and other conditions, there can be no assurance that
historic interest rates are indicative of rates which may prevail in the future.
Since the value of securities in the Portfolio fluctuates depending upon market
factors and inversely with current interest rate levels, the net asset value of
its shares will fluctuate. The investment adviser will adjust the investments of
the Portfolio as considered advisable in view of prevailing or anticipated
market conditions. Accordingly, certain portfolio securities may be purchased or
sold in anticipation of a rise or a decline in interest rates.
 
The Portfolio does not make investments for short-term profits, but it is not
restricted in policy with regard to portfolio turnover and will make changes in
its investment portfolio from time to time as business and economic conditions
or market prices may dictate and as its investment policy may require.
 
The Portfolio may write and purchase put and call options traded on national
securities exchanges or over-the-counter, including options on securities
indices. The Portfolio may also engage in financial futures transactions and may
purchase foreign securities and engage in related foreign currency transactions.
The Portfolio may purchase or sell portfolio securities on a when-issued or
delayed delivery basis. See "Special Risk Factors--Foreign Securities" and
"Investment Techniques."
 
EQUITY PORTFOLIO. The Equity Portfolio seeks maximum appreciation of capital
through diversification of investment securities having potential for capital
appreciation. Current income will not be a significant factor. The Portfolio's
 
                                        8
<PAGE>   42
 
investments normally will consist of equity securities and securities
convertible into or exchangeable for equity securities; however, it may also
make private placement investments (which are normally restricted securities).
 
As a non-fundamental investment policy, the Equity Portfolio will invest at
least 65% of its total assets in equity securities under normal circumstances.
Equity securities include common stocks, preferred stocks, securities
convertible into or exchangeable for common or preferred stocks, equity
investments in partnerships, joint ventures and other forms of non-corporate
investment and warrants, options and rights exercisable for equity securities.
The common stocks or the other securities selected will be those which, in the
investment manager's judgment, have significant appreciation possibilities.
Investment opportunities will often be sought among securities of small, less
well-known companies; but securities of large, well-known companies will also be
purchased, particularly when the investment manager considers such securities to
be priced favorably in comparison with securities of smaller companies.
 
For defensive purposes the Portfolio may temporarily hold a significant portion
of its assets in cash or defensive type securities, such as liquid high grade
debt securities, high quality money market instruments and repurchase
agreements.
 
The Portfolio does not intend to engage actively in trading for short-term
profits, but it is not restricted in policy with regard to portfolio turnover
and will make changes in its investment portfolio from time to time as business
and economic conditions or market prices may dictate and as its investment
policy may require.
 
The Portfolio may write and purchase put and call options traded on national
securities exchanges or over-the-counter, including options on securities
indices. The Portfolio may also engage in financial futures transactions and may
purchase foreign securities and engage in related foreign currency transactions.
The Portfolio may purchase or sell portfolio securities on a when-issued or
delayed delivery basis. See "Special Risk Factors--Foreign Securities" and
"Investment Techniques."
 
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO. The Government Securities Portfolio seeks high
current return consistent with preservation of capital from a portfolio composed
primarily of U.S. Government securities. The Portfolio will also invest in
fixed-income securities other than U.S. Government securities, and will engage
in options and financial futures transactions. The Portfolio may purchase or
sell portfolio securities on a when-issued or delayed delivery basis. See
"Investment Techniques." The Portfolio's current return is sought from interest
income and net short-term gains on securities and options and futures
transactions.
 
Under normal market conditions, the Portfolio will, as a fundamental policy,
invest at least 65% of its total assets in U.S. Government securities and
repurchase agreements of U.S. Government securities. There are two broad
categories of U.S. Government securities: (a) direct obligations of the U.S.
Treasury and (b) obligations issued or guaranteed by agencies and
instrumentalities of the United States. Some obligations issued or guaranteed by
agencies or instrumentalities are backed by the full faith and credit of the
United States (such as Government National Mortgage Association "GNMA"
Certificates) and others are backed exclusively by the agency or instrumentality
with limited rights of the issuer to borrow from the U.S. Treasury (such as
Federal National Mortgage Association Bonds). GNMA Certificates are debt
securities which represent an interest in one or a pool of mortgages which are
insured by the Federal Housing Administration or the Farmers Home
Administration, or guaranteed by the Veterans Administration. U.S. Government
securities may include "zero coupon" securities that have been stripped by the
U.S. Government of their unmatured interest coupons (see "Investment Policies
and Techniques" in the Statement of Additional Information for a discussion of
their features and risks) and collateralized obligations issued or guaranteed by
a U.S. Government agency or instrumentality (see "Investment Techniques").
 
U.S. Government securities of the type in which the Portfolio may invest have
historically involved little risk of loss of principal if held to maturity. The
government guarantee of the securities in the Portfolio, however, does not
guarantee the market value of the shares of the Portfolio. There are market
risks inherent in all investments in securities and the value of an investment
in the Portfolio will fluctuate over time. Normally, the value of the
Portfolio's investments varies inversely with changes in interest rates. For
example, as interest rates rise, the value of the Portfolio's investments will
tend to decline and, as interest rates fall, the value of the Portfolio's
investments will tend to increase. In addition, the potential for appreciation
in the event of a decline in interest rates may be limited or negated by
increased principal prepayments in respect to certain mortgage-backed
securities, such as GNMA certificates. Prepayment of high interest rate
mortgage-backed securities during times of declining interest rates will tend to
lower the return of the Portfolio and may even result in losses to the Portfolio
if some securities were acquired at a premium. With respect to securities
supported only by the credit of the issuing agency or by an additional line of
credit with the U.S. Treasury, there is no guarantee that the U.S. Government
will provide support to such agencies and such securities may involve risk of
loss of principal and interest.
 
                                        9
<PAGE>   43
 
The Portfolio will seek to enhance income through limited investment (up to 35%
of total assets) in fixed income securities other than U.S. Government
securities. Such other fixed-income securities include: (a) corporate debt
securities that are rated at the time of purchase within the four highest grades
by either Moody's (Aaa, Aa, A, or Baa) or S&P (AAA, AA, A, or BBB); (b)
commercial paper that is rated at the time of purchase within the two highest
grades by either Moody's (Prime-1 or Prime-2) or S&P (A-1 or A-2); (c) bank
certificates of deposit (including term deposits) or bankers' acceptances issued
by domestic banks (including their foreign branches) and Canadian chartered
banks having total assets in excess of $1 billion; and (d) repurchase agreements
with respect to any of the foregoing; provided, however, the Portfolio may
invest up to 10% of its total assets in fixed income securities without regard
to the foregoing limitations, including securities that are rated below Baa by
Moody's and BBB by S&P or are non-rated (sometimes called "junk bonds"). The
characteristics of the rating categories are described in "Appendix--Ratings of
Investments" in the Statement of Additional Information. For a discussion of
lower rated and non-rated securities and related risks, see "High Yield
Portfolio" above and "Special Risk Factors--High Yield Bonds (High Risk)" below.
 
The Portfolio may also invest in collateralized obligations which, consistent
with the limitations reflected above, may be privately issued or may be issued
or guaranteed by U.S. Government agencies or instrumentalities. See "Investment
Techniques."
 
During temporary defensive periods when the Fund's investment manager deems it
appropriate, the Portfolio may invest all or a portion of its assets in cash or
short-term high quality money market instruments, including short-term U.S.
Government securities and repurchase agreements with respect to such securities.
The yields on these securities tend to be lower than the yields on other
securities to be purchased by the Portfolio.
 
INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO. The International Portfolio seeks a total return, a
combination of capital growth and income, principally through an internationally
diversified portfolio of equity securities. Investments may be made for capital
growth or for income or any combination thereof for the purpose of achieving a
high overall return. There is no limitation on the percentage or amount of the
Portfolio's assets that may be invested for growth or income, and therefore at
any particular time the investment emphasis may be placed solely or primarily on
growth of capital or on income. While the Portfolio invests principally in
equity securities of non-U.S. issuers, it may also invest in convertible and
debt securities and foreign currencies. The Portfolio invests primarily in
non-U.S. issuers, and under normal circumstances more than 80% of the
Portfolio's total assets will be invested in non-U.S. issuers. In determining
whether the Portfolio will be invested for capital growth or income, the
investment manager analyzes the international equity and fixed income markets
and seeks to assess the degree of risk and level of return that can be expected
from each market. Also see "Special Risk Factors--Foreign Securities."
 
In pursuing its objective, the Portfolio invests primarily in common stocks of
established non-U.S. companies believed to have potential for capital growth,
income or both. However, there is no requirement that the Portfolio invest
exclusively in common stocks or other equity securities. The Portfolio may
invest in any other type of security including, but not limited to, convertible
securities (including warrants), preferred stocks, bonds, notes and other debt
securities of companies (including Euro-currency instruments and securities) or
obligations of domestic or foreign governments and their political subdivisions.
When the investment manager believes that the total return potential in debt
securities equals or exceeds that of equity securities, the Portfolio may
substantially increase its holdings of such debt securities. The Portfolio may
establish and maintain reserves for defensive purposes or to enable it to take
advantage of future buying opportunities. The Portfolio's reserves may be
invested in domestic as well as foreign short-term money market instruments
including, but not limited to, government obligations, certificates of deposit,
bankers' acceptances, time deposits, commercial paper, short-term corporate debt
securities and repurchase agreements.
 
The Portfolio makes investments in various countries. Under normal
circumstances, business activities in not less than three different foreign
countries will be represented in the portfolio. The Portfolio may, from time to
time, have more than 25% of its assets invested in any major industrial or
developed country that in the view of KFS poses no unique investment risk. The
Portfolio may purchase securities of companies, wherever organized, that have
their principal activities and interests outside the United States. Under
exceptional economic or market conditions abroad, the Portfolio may, for
defensive purposes, invest all or a major portion of its assets in U.S.
Government obligations or securities of companies incorporated in and having
their principal activities in the United States. The Portfolio may also invest
its reserves in domestic short-term money market instruments as described above.
 
In determining the appropriate distribution of investments among various
countries and geographic regions, the investment manager ordinarily considers
such factors as: prospects for relative economic growth among foreign countries;
expected levels of inflation; relative price levels of the various capital
markets; government policies influencing business conditions; the outlook for
currency relationships and the range of individual investment
 
                                       10
<PAGE>   44
 
opportunities available to the international investor. Currently, more than 60%
of the market capitalization of equity securities are represented by securities
in currencies other than the U.S. Dollar.
 
The Portfolio may purchase and sell options on securities, index options,
financial futures contracts and options on financial futures contracts. The
Portfolio may enter into forward foreign currency exchange contracts, foreign
currency options and foreign currency futures contracts and options thereon to
protect against uncertainty in the level of future foreign exchange rates. See
"Investment Techniques" below.
 
Generally, the Portfolio will not trade in securities for short-term profits
but, when circumstances warrant, securities may be sold without regard to the
length of time held.
 
Investors should understand that the expense ratio of the Portfolio can be
expected to be higher than that of portfolios investing in domestic securities
since the costs of operation are higher.
 
SMALL CAP PORTFOLIO.  The Small Cap Portfolio seeks maximum appreciation of
investors' capital. Current income will not be a significant factor. The
Portfolio is designed primarily for investors with substantial resources and the
investment experience to consider their shares as a long-term investment
involving financial risk commensurate with potential substantial gains. Since
many of the securities in the Portfolio may be considered speculative in nature
by traditional investment standards, substantially greater than average market
volatility and investment risk may be involved. There is no assurance that the
Portfolio's objective will be achieved and its returns and net asset value will
fluctuate.
 
The Small Cap Portfolio seeks attractive areas for investment opportunity
arising from such factors as technological advances, new marketing methods, and
changes in the economy and population. Currently, the investment manager
believes that such investment opportunities may be found among the following:
(a) companies engaged in high technology fields such as electronics, medical
technology and computer software and specialty retailing; (b) companies having a
significantly improved earnings outlook as the result of a changed economic
environment, acquisitions, mergers, new management, changed corporate strategy
or product innovation; (c) companies supplying new or rapidly growing services
to consumers and businesses in such fields as automation, data processing,
communications, and marketing and finance; and (d) companies having innovative
concepts or ideas.
 
As a non-fundamental investment policy, at least 65% of the Small Cap
Portfolio's total assets normally will be invested in the equity securities of
smaller companies, i.e., those having a market capitalization of $1 billion or
less at the time of investment, many of which would be in the early stages of
their life cycle. The investment manager currently believes that investment in
such companies may offer greater opportunities for growth of capital than
larger, more established companies, but also involves certain special risks.
Smaller companies often have limited product lines, markets or financial
resources, and they may be dependent upon one or a few key people for
management. The securities of such companies generally are subject to more
abrupt or erratic market movements and may be less liquid than securities of
larger, more established companies or the market averages in general.
 
The Small Cap Portfolio's investment portfolio will normally consist primarily
of common stocks and securities convertible into or exchangeable for common
stocks, including warrants and rights. The Portfolio may also invest to a
limited degree in preferred stocks and debt securities when they are believed by
the investment manager to offer opportunities for capital growth. The Portfolio
may also write and purchase options, engage in financial futures transactions,
purchase foreign securities, engage in related foreign currency transactions and
lend its portfolio securities. See "Special Risk Factors--Foreign Securities"
and "Investment Techniques" below. When a defensive position is deemed
advisable, the Portfolio may, without limit, invest in high grade debt
securities and securities of the U.S. Government and its agencies or
instrumentalities or retain cash or cash equivalents, including repurchase
agreements.
 
In the selection of investments, long-term capital appreciation will take
precedence over short range market fluctuations. The Small Cap Portfolio does
not intend to engage actively in trading for short-term profits, although it may
occasionally make investments for short-term capital appreciation when such
action is believed to be desirable and consistent with sound investment
procedure. Generally, the Portfolio will make long-term rather than short-term
investments. Nevertheless, it may dispose of such investments at any time it may
be deemed advisable because of a subsequent change in the circumstances of a
particular company or industry or in general market or economic conditions. The
rate of portfolio turnover is not a limiting factor when changes in investment
are deemed appropriate. In addition, market conditions, cash requirements for
redemption and repurchase of Portfolio shares or other factors could affect the
portfolio turnover rate.
 
SPECIAL RISK FACTORS--HIGH YIELD (HIGH RISK) BONDS.  As reflected above, the
High Yield Portfolio intends to invest a substantial portion of its assets in
fixed income securities offering high current income. Subject to their specific
investment objectives and policies as described above, the Total Return and
Government Securities
 
                                       11
<PAGE>   45
 
Portfolios also may invest a portion of their assets in such securities. Such
high yield (high risk) fixed income securities will ordinarily be in the lower
rating categories (securities rated below the fourth category) of recognized
rating agencies or will be non-rated. Lower rated and non-rated securities,
which are sometimes referred to by the popular press as "junk bonds," have
widely varying characteristics and quality. These lower rated and non-rated
fixed income securities are considered, on balance, as predominantly speculative
with respect to capacity to pay interest and repay principal in accordance with
the terms of the obligation and generally involve more credit risk than
securities in the higher rating categories. Accordingly, an investment in the
High Yield Portfolio may not constitute a complete investment program and may
not be appropriate for all investors.
 
The market values of such securities tend to reflect individual corporate
developments to a greater extent than do those of higher rated securities, which
react primarily to fluctuations in the general level of interest rates. Such
lower rated securities also are more sensitive to economic conditions than are
higher rated securities. Adverse publicity and investor perceptions regarding
lower rated bonds, whether or not based on fundamental analysis, may depress the
prices for such securities. These and other factors adversely affecting the
market value of high yield securities will adversely affect a Portfolio's net
asset value. Although some risk is inherent in all securities ownership, holders
of fixed income securities have a claim on the assets of the issuer prior to the
holders of common stock. Therefore, an investment in fixed income securities
generally entails less risk than an investment in common stock of the same
issuer.
 
The investment philosophy of the High Yield Portfolio with respect to high yield
(high risk) bonds is based upon the premise that over the long term a broadly
diversified portfolio of high yield fixed-income securities should, even taking
into account possible losses, provide a higher net return than that achievable
on a portfolio of higher rated securities. The Portfolio seeks to achieve the
highest yields possible while reducing relative risk through (a) broad
diversification, (b) credit analysis by the investment manager of the issuers in
which the Portfolio invests, (c) purchase of high yield securities at discounts
from par or stated value when practicable and (d) monitoring and seeking to
anticipate changes and trends in the economy and financial markets that might
affect the prices of portfolio securities. The investment manager's judgment as
to the "reasonableness" of the risk involved in any particular investment will
be a function of its experience in managing fixed income investments and its
evaluation of general economic and financial conditions; of a specific issuer's
business and management, cash flow, earnings coverage of interest and dividends,
ability to operate under adverse economic conditions, and fair market value of
assets; and of such other considerations as the investment manager may deem
appropriate. The investment manager, while seeking maximum current yield, will
monitor current corporate developments with respect to portfolio securities and
potential investments and to broad trends in the economy. In some circumstances,
defensive strategies may be implemented to preserve or enhance capital even at
the sacrifice of current yield. Defensive strategies, which may be used singly
or in any combination, may include, but are not limited to, investments in
discount securities or investments in money market instruments as well as
futures and options strategies.
 
High yield (high risk) securities frequently are issued by corporations in the
growth stage of their development. They may also be issued in connection with a
corporate reorganization or issued as part of a corporate takeover. Companies
that issue such high yielding securities often are highly leveraged and may not
have available to them more traditional methods of financing. Therefore, the
risk associated with acquiring the securities of such issuers generally is
greater than is the case with higher rated securities. For example, during an
economic downturn or recession, highly leveraged issuers of high yield
securities may experience financial stress. During such periods, such issuers
may not have sufficient revenues to meet their interest payment obligations. The
issuer's ability to service its debt obligations may also be adversely affected
by specific corporate developments, or the issuer's inability to meet specific
projected business forecasts, or the unavailability of additional financing. The
risk of loss from default by the issuer is significantly greater for the holders
of high yielding securities because such securities are generally unsecured and
are often subordinated to other creditors of the issuer.
 
A Portfolio may have difficulty disposing of certain high yield (high risk)
securities because they may have a thin trading market. Because not all dealers
maintain markets in all high yield securities, the Fund anticipates that such
securities could be sold only to a limited number of dealers or institutional
investors. The lack of a liquid secondary market may have an adverse effect on
market price and a Portfolio's ability to dispose of particular issues and may
also make it more difficult for the Fund to obtain accurate market quotations
for purposes of valuing a Portfolio's assets. Market quotations generally are
available on many high yield issues only from a limited number of dealers and
may not necessarily represent firm bids of such dealers or prices for actual
sales.
 
Zero coupon securities and pay-in-kind bonds involve additional special
considerations. Zero coupon securities are debt obligations that do not entitle
the holder to any periodic payments of interest prior to maturity or a specified
cash payment date when the securities begin paying current interest (the "cash
payment date") and therefore are
 
                                       12
<PAGE>   46
 
issued and traded at a discount from their face amount or par value. The market
prices of zero coupon securities are generally more volatile than the market
prices of securities that pay interest periodically and are likely to respond to
changes in interest rates to a greater degree than do securities paying interest
currently having similar maturities and credit quality. Zero coupon, pay-in-kind
or deferred interest bonds carry additional risk in that, unlike bonds that pay
interest throughout the period to maturity, a Portfolio will realize no cash
until the cash payment date unless a portion of such securities is sold and, if
the issuer defaults, a Portfolio may obtain no return at all on its investment.
 
Additional information concerning high yield (high risk) securities appears
under "Appendix--Portfolio Composition of High Yield Bonds" in this prospectus
and under "Appendix--Ratings of Investments" in the Statement of Additional
Information.
 
SPECIAL RISK FACTORS--FOREIGN SECURITIES. The Total Return, High Yield, Equity
and Small Cap Portfolios invest primarily in securities that are publicly traded
in the United States; but, they have discretion to invest a portion of their
assets in foreign securities that are traded principally in securities markets
outside the United States. As a non-fundamental policy, these Portfolios
currently limit investment in foreign securities not publicly traded in the
United States to 25% of their total assets. These Portfolios may also invest
without limit in U.S. Dollar denominated American Depository Receipts ("ADRs")
which are bought and sold in the United States. The Money Market Portfolio,
within its quality standards, may also invest in securities of foreign issuers.
However, such investments will be in U.S. Dollar denominated instruments.
Foreign securities in which a Portfolio may invest include any type of security
consistent with that Portfolio's investment objective and policies. In
connection with their foreign securities investments, such Portfolios may, to a
limited extent, engage in foreign currency exchange transactions and purchase
and sell foreign currency options and foreign currency futures contracts as a
hedge and not for speculation. The International Portfolio may invest without
limit in foreign securities and may engage in foreign currency exchange
transactions and may purchase and sell foreign currency options and foreign
currency futures contracts. See "Investment Techniques--Options and Financial
Futures Transactions--Foreign Currency Transactions." The International
Portfolio may invest without limitation in securities of foreign issuers.
 
Foreign securities involve currency risks. The U.S. Dollar value of a foreign
security tends to decrease when the value of the U.S. Dollar rises against the
foreign currency in which the security is denominated and tends to increase when
the value of the U.S. Dollar falls against such currency. Fluctuations in
exchange rates may also affect the earning power and asset value of the foreign
entity issuing the security. Dividend and interest payments may be repatriated
based on the exchange rate at the time of disbursement or payment, and
restrictions on capital flows may be imposed. Losses and other expenses may be
incurred in converting between various currencies.
 
Foreign securities may be subject to foreign government taxes that reduce their
attractiveness. Other risks of investing in such securities include political or
economic instability in the country involved, the difficulty of predicting
international trade patterns and the possibility of imposition of exchange
controls. The prices of such securities may be more volatile than those of
domestic securities. In addition, there may be less publicly available
information about foreign issuers than about domestic issuers. Many foreign
issuers are not subject to uniform accounting, auditing and financial reporting
standards comparable to those applicable to domestic issuers. There is generally
less regulation of stock exchanges, brokers, banks, and listed companies abroad
than in the United States. With respect to certain foreign countries, there is a
possibility of expropriation, excessive taxation or diplomatic developments
which could affect investment in these countries.
 
Emerging Markets. While a Portfolio's investments in foreign securities will
principally be in developed countries, a Portfolio may make investments in
developing or "emerging" countries, which involve exposure to economic
structures that are generally less diverse and mature than in the United States,
and to political systems that may be less stable. A developing or emerging
market country can be considered to be a country that is in the initial stages
of its industrialization cycle. Currently, emerging markets generally include
every country in the world other than the United States, Canada, Japan,
Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, Singapore and most Western European
countries. Currently, investing in many emerging markets may not be desirable or
feasible because of the lack of adequate custody arrangements for a Portfolio's
assets, overly burdensome repatriation and similar restrictions, the lack of
organized and liquid securities markets, unacceptable political risks or other
reasons. As opportunities to invest in securities in emerging markets develop, a
Portfolio may expand and further broaden the group of emerging markets in which
it invests. In the past, markets of developing or emerging market countries have
been more volatile than the markets of developed countries; however, such
markets often have provided higher rates of return to investors. The investment
manager believes that these characteristics can be expected to continue in the
future.
 
Many of the risks described above relating to foreign securities generally will
be greater for emerging markets than for developed countries. For instance,
economies in individual developing markets may differ favorably or unfavorably
from the U.S. economy in such respects as growth of domestic product, rates of
inflation, currency
 
                                       13
<PAGE>   47
 
depreciation, capital reinvestment, resource self-sufficiency and balance of
payments positions. Many emerging markets have experienced substantial rates of
inflation for many years. Inflation and rapid fluctuations in inflation rates
have had and may continue to have very negative effects on the economies and
securities markets of certain developing markets. Economies in emerging markets
generally are dependent heavily upon international trade and, accordingly, have
been and may continue to be affected adversely by trade barriers, exchange
controls, managed adjustments in relative currency values and other
protectionist measures imposed or negotiated by the countries with which they
trade. These economies also have been and may continue to be affected adversely
by economic conditions in the countries with which they trade.
 
Also, the securities markets of developing countries are substantially smaller,
less developed, less liquid and more volatile than the securities markets of the
United States and other more developed countries. Disclosure, regulatory and
accounting standards in many respects are less stringent than in the United
States and other developed markets. There also may be a lower level of
monitoring and regulation of developing markets and the activities of investors
in such markets, and enforcement of existing regulations has been extremely
limited.
 
In addition, brokerage commissions, custodial services and other needs relating
to investment in foreign markets generally are more expensive than in the United
States; and this is particularly true with respect to emerging markets. Such
markets have different settlement and clearance procedures. In certain markets
there have been times when settlements could not keep pace with the volume of
securities transactions, making it difficult to conduct such transactions. Such
settlement problems may cause emerging market securities to be illiquid. The
inability of a Portfolio to make intended securities purchases because of
settlement problems could cause the Portfolio to miss attractive investment
opportunities. Inability to dispose of a portfolio security because of
settlement problems could result in losses to a Portfolio from subsequent
declines in value of the portfolio security or, if a Portfolio has entered into
a contract to sell the security, it could result in possible liability to the
purchaser. Certain emerging markets may lack clearing facilities equivalent to
those in developed countries. Accordingly, settlements can pose additional risks
in such markets and ultimately can expose the Portfolio to the risk of losses
resulting from a Portfolio's inability to recover from a counterparty.
 
The risk also exists that an emergency situation may arise in one or more
emerging markets as a result of which trading in securities may cease or may be
substantially curtailed and prices for a Portfolio's securities in such markets
may not be readily available. A Portfolio's securities in the affected markets
will be valued at fair value determined in good faith by or under the direction
of the Board of Trustees of the Fund.
 
Investment in certain emerging market securities is restricted or controlled to
varying degrees. These restrictions or controls may at times limit or preclude
foreign investment in certain emerging market securities and increase the costs
and expenses of a Portfolio. Emerging markets may require governmental approval
for the repatriation of investment income, capital or the proceeds of sales of
securities by foreign investors. In addition, if a deterioration occurs in an
emerging market country's balance of payments, the market could impose temporary
restrictions on foreign capital remittances.
 
Fixed Income. Since most foreign fixed income securities are not rated, a
Portfolio will invest in foreign fixed income securities based on KFS's analysis
without relying on published ratings. Since such investments will be based upon
KFS's analysis rather than upon published ratings, achievement of a Portfolio's
goals may depend more upon the abilities of KFS than would otherwise be the
case.
 
The value of the foreign fixed income securities held by a Portfolio, and thus
the net asset value of the Portfolio's shares, generally will fluctuate with (a)
changes in the perceived creditworthiness of the issuers of those securities,
(b) movements in interest rates, and (c) changes in the relative values of the
currencies in which a Portfolio's investments in fixed income securities are
denominated with respect to the U.S. Dollar. The extent of the fluctuation will
depend on various factors, such as the average maturity of a Portfolio's
investments in foreign fixed income securities, and the extent to which a
Portfolio hedges its interest rate, credit and currency exchange rate risks.
Many of the foreign fixed income obligations in which a Portfolio will invest
will have long maturities. A longer average maturity generally is associated
with a higher level of volatility in the market value of such securities in
response to changes in market conditions.
 
Investments in sovereign debt, including Brady Bonds, involve special risks.
Brady Bonds are debt securities issued under a plan implemented to allow debtor
nations to restructure their outstanding commercial bank indebtedness. Foreign
governmental issuers of debt or the governmental authorities that control the
repayment of the debt may be unable or unwilling to repay principal or pay
interest when due. In the event of default, there may be limited or no legal
recourse in that, generally, remedies for defaults must be pursued in the courts
of the defaulting party. Political conditions, especially a sovereign entity's
willingness to meet the terms of its fixed income securities, are of
considerable significance. Also, there can be no assurance that the holders of
commercial bank loans to the same
 
                                       14
<PAGE>   48
 
sovereign entity may not contest payments to the holders of sovereign debt in
the event of default under commercial bank loan agreements. In addition, there
is no bankruptcy proceeding with respect to sovereign debt on which a sovereign
has defaulted, and a Portfolio may be unable to collect all or any part of its
investment in a particular issue.
 
Foreign investment in certain sovereign debt is restricted or controlled to
varying degrees, including requiring governmental approval for the repatriation
of income, capital or proceeds of sales by foreign investors. These restrictions
or controls may at times limit or preclude foreign investment in certain
sovereign debt or increase the costs and expenses of a Portfolio. A significant
portion of the sovereign debt in which a Portfolio may invest is issued as part
of debt restructuring and such debt is to be considered speculative. There is a
history of defaults with respect to commercial bank loans by public and private
entities issuing Brady Bonds. All or a portion of the interest payments and/or
principal repayment with respect to Brady Bonds may be uncollateralized.
 
Privatized Enterprises. Investments in foreign securities may include securities
issued by enterprises that have undergone or are currently undergoing
privatization. The governments of certain foreign countries have, to varying
degrees, embarked on privatization programs contemplating the sale of all or
part of their interests in state enterprises. A Portfolio's investments in the
securities of privatized enterprises include privately negotiated investments in
a government or state-owned or controlled company or enterprise that has not yet
conducted an initial equity offering, investments in the initial offering of
equity securities of a state enterprise or former state enterprise and
investments in the securities of a state enterprise following its initial equity
offering.
 
In certain jurisdictions, the ability of a foreign entity to participate in
privatizations may be limited by local law, or the price or terms on which the
entity may be able to participate may be less advantageous than for local
investors. Moreover, there can be no assurance that governments that have
embarked on privatization programs will continue to divest their ownership of
state enterprises, that proposed privatizations will be successful or that
governments will not re-nationalize enterprises that have been privatized.
 
In the case of the enterprises in which a Portfolio may invest, large blocks of
the stock of those enterprises may be held by a small group of stockholders,
even after the initial equity offerings by those enterprises. The sale of some
portion or all of those blocks could have an adverse effect on the price of the
stock of any such enterprise.
 
Prior to making an initial equity offering, most state enterprises or former
state enterprises go through an internal reorganization or management. Such
reorganizations are made in an attempt to better enable these enterprises to
compete in the private sector. However, certain reorganizations could result in
a management team that does not function as well as the enterprises's prior
management and may have a negative effect on such enterprise. In addition, the
privatization of an enterprise by its government may occur over a number of
years, with the government continuing to hold a controlling position in the
enterprise even after the initial equity offering for the enterprise.
 
Prior to privatization, most of the state enterprises in which a Portfolio may
invest enjoy the protection of and receive preferential treatment from the
respective sovereigns that own or control them. After making an initial equity
offering these enterprises may no longer have such protection or receive such
preferential treatment and may become subject to market competition from which
they were previously protected. Some of these enterprises may not be able to
effectively operate in a competitive market and may suffer losses or experience
bankruptcy due to such competition.
 
Depositary Certificates. For many foreign securities, there are U.S.
Dollar-denominated ADRs, which are bought and sold in the United States and are
issued by domestic banks. ADRs represent the right to receive securities of
foreign issuers deposited in the domestic bank or a correspondent bank. ADRs do
not eliminate all the risk inherent in investing in the securities of foreign
issuers. However, by investing in ADRs rather than directly in foreign issuers'
stock, the Portfolios avoid currency risks during the settlement period. In
general, there is a large, liquid market in the United States for most ADRs. The
Portfolios may also invest in European Depository Receipts ("EDRs"), which are
receipts evidencing an arrangement with a European bank similar to that for ADRs
and are designed for use in the European securities markets. EDRs are not
necessarily denominated in the currency of the underlying security.
 
THE FUND. The portfolio turnover rates for the Portfolios are listed under
"Financial Highlights." Since securities with maturities of less than one year
are excluded from portfolio turnover rate calculations, the portfolio turnover
rate for the Money Market Portfolio is zero. Frequency of portfolio turnover
will not be a limiting factor should the investment manager deem it desirable to
purchase or sell securities. Higher portfolio turnover (over 100%) involves
correspondingly greater brokerage commissions or other transaction costs. Higher
portfolio turnover may result in the realization of greater net short-term
capital gains. In order to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company
for federal income tax purposes, less than 30% of the annual gross income of a
Portfolio must be derived
 
                                       15
<PAGE>   49
 
from the sale or disposition of securities and certain other investments held by
a Portfolio for less than three months. See "Dividends and Taxes" in the
Statement of Additional Information.
 
A Portfolio will not, as a non-fundamental policy, purchase illiquid securities
including repurchase agreements maturing in more than seven days, if, as a
result thereof, more than 15% (10% for the Money Market Portfolio) of the
Portfolio's net assets, valued at the time of the transactions, would be
invested in such securities.
 
                             INVESTMENT TECHNIQUES
 
LENDING OF PORTFOLIO SECURITIES. Consistent with applicable regulatory
requirements, any of the Portfolios may lend securities (principally to
broker-dealers) where such loans are callable at any time and are continuously
secured by segregated collateral (cash or U.S. Government securities) equal to
no less than the market value, determined daily, of the securities loaned. The
Portfolio will receive amounts equal to dividends or interest on the securities
loaned. It will also earn income for having made the loan. Any cash collateral
pursuant to these loans will be invested in short-term money market instruments.
As with other extensions of credit there are risks of delay in recovery or even
loss of rights in the collateral should the borrower of the securities fail
financially. However, the loans would be made only to firms deemed by the Fund's
investment manager to be of good standing, and when the Fund's investment
manager believes the potential earnings justify the attendant risk. The Fund
will limit such lending to not more than one-third of the value of a Portfolio's
total assets.
 
OPTIONS AND FINANCIAL FUTURES TRANSACTIONS. The Total Return, High Yield,
Equity, Government Securities, International and Small Cap Portfolios may each
deal in options on securities and securities indices, which options may be
listed for trading on a national securities exchange or traded over-the-counter.
The Money Market Portfolio does not engage in options transactions. The ability
to engage in options transactions enables a Portfolio to pursue its investment
objective and also to hedge against currency and market risks but is not
intended for speculation. In connection with their foreign securities
investments, the Total Return, High Yield, Equity, International and Small Cap
Portfolios may also purchase and sell foreign currency options.
 
The Government Securities Portfolio individually may write (sell) covered call
options on up to 100% of net assets, may write (sell) secured put options on up
to 50% of net assets and may purchase put and call options provided that no more
than 5% of net assets may be invested in premiums on such options. The Total
Return, High Yield, Equity, International and Small Cap Portfolios may write
(sell) covered call and secured put options on up to 25% of net assets and may
purchase put and call options provided that no more than 5% of its net assets
may be invested in premiums on such options.
 
The Total Return, High Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and
Small Cap Portfolios may write (sell) covered call options so long as they own
securities or other assets that are acceptable for escrow purposes. Also, such
Portfolios may write (sell) secured put options, which means that so long as the
Portfolio is obligated as a writer of a put option, it will invest an amount not
less than the exercise price of the put option in money market instruments.
 
A call option gives the purchaser the right to buy, and the writer the
obligation to sell, the underlying security or other asset at the exercise price
during the option period. A put option gives the purchaser the right to sell,
and the writer the obligation to buy, the underlying security or other asset at
the exercise price during the option period. The writer of a covered call owns
securities or other assets that are acceptable for escrow and the writer of a
secured put invests an amount not less than the exercise price in eligible
securities or other assets to the extent that it is obligated as a writer. If a
call written by a Portfolio is exercised, the Portfolio foregoes any possible
profit from an increase in the market price of the underlying security or other
asset over the exercise price plus the premium received. In writing puts, there
is a risk that a Portfolio may be required to take delivery of the underlying
security or other asset at a disadvantageous price.
 
Over-the-counter traded options ("OTC options") differ from exchange traded
options in several respects. Such options are transacted with dealers directly
and not with a clearing corporation and there is a risk of non-performance by
the dealer as a result of the insolvency of such dealer or otherwise, in which
event a Portfolio may experience material losses. However, in writing options
the premium is paid in advance by the dealer. OTC options are available for a
greater variety of securities or other assets, and a wider range of expiration
dates and exercise prices, than for exchange traded options.
 
A Portfolio, as part of its option transactions, also may use index options.
Through the writing or purchase of index options a Portfolio can achieve many of
the same objectives as through the use of options on individual securities.
Options on securities indices are similar to options on a security except that,
rather than the right to take or make delivery of a security at a specified
price, an option on a securities index gives the holder the right to receive,
upon
 
                                       16
<PAGE>   50
 
exercise of the option, an amount of cash if the closing level of the securities
index upon which the option is based is greater than, in the case of a call, or
less than, in the case of a put, the exercise price of the option.
 
Price movements in securities which a Portfolio owns or intends to purchase
probably will not correlate perfectly with movements in the level of an index
and, therefore, a Portfolio bears the risk of a loss on an index option which is
not completely offset by movements in the price of such securities. Because
index options are settled in cash, a call writer cannot determine the amount of
its settlement obligations in advance and, unlike call writing on specific
securities, cannot provide in advance for, or cover, its potential settlement
obligations by acquiring and holding the underlying securities.
 
The Total Return, High Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and
Small Cap Portfolios may each engage in financial futures transactions. The
Money Market Portfolio does not engage in financial futures transactions.
Financial futures contracts are commodity contracts that obligate the long or
short holder to take or make delivery of a specified quantity of a financial
instrument, such as a security, or the cash value of a securities index during a
specified future period at a specified price. A Portfolio will "cover" futures
contracts sold by the Portfolio and maintain in a segregated account certain
liquid assets in connection with futures contracts purchased by the Portfolio as
described under "Investment Policies and Techniques" in the Statement of
Additional Information. In connection with their foreign securities investments,
the Total Return, High Yield, Equity, International and Small Cap Portfolios may
also engage in foreign currency financial futures transactions. A Portfolio will
not enter into any futures contracts or options on futures contracts if the
aggregate of the contract value of the outstanding futures contracts of the
Portfolio and futures contracts subject to outstanding options written by the
Portfolio would exceed 50% of the total assets of the Portfolio.
 
The Portfolios may engage in financial futures transactions and may use index
options as an attempt to hedge against currency and market risks. For example,
when the near-term market view is bearish but the portfolio composition is
judged satisfactory for the longer term, exposure to temporary declines in the
market may be reduced by entering into futures contracts to sell securities or
the cash value of an index. Conversely, where the near-term view is bullish, but
a Portfolio is believed to be well positioned for the longer term with a high
cash position, the Portfolio can hedge against market increases by entering into
futures contracts to buy securities or the cash value of an index. In either
case, the use of futures contracts would tend to reduce portfolio turnover and
facilitate a Portfolio's pursuit of its investment objective. Also, if a
Portfolio owned long-term bonds and interest rates were expected to rise, it
could sell financial futures contracts. If interest rates did increase, the
value of the bonds in the Portfolio would decline, but this decline would be
offset in whole or in part by an increase in the value of the Portfolio's
futures contracts. If, on the other hand, long-term interest rates were expected
to decline, the Portfolio could hold short-term debt securities and benefit from
the income earned by holding such securities, while at the same time the
Portfolio could purchase futures contracts on long-term bonds or the cash value
of a securities index. Thus, the Portfolio could take advantage of the
anticipated rise in the value of long-term bonds without actually buying them.
The futures contracts and short-term debt securities could then be liquidated
and the cash proceeds used to buy long-term bonds.
 
Futures contracts entail risks. If the investment manager's judgment about the
general direction of interest rates, markets or exchange rates is wrong, the
overall performance may be poorer than if no such contracts had been entered
into. There may be an imperfect correlation between movements in prices of
futures contracts and portfolio assets being hedged. In addition, the market
prices of futures contracts may be affected by certain factors. If participants
in the futures market elect to close out their contracts through offsetting
transactions rather than meet margin requirements, distortions in the normal
relationship between the assets and futures market could result. Price
distortions also could result if investors in futures contracts decide to make
or take delivery of underlying securities or other assets rather than engage in
closing transactions because of the resultant reduction in the liquidity of the
futures market. In addition, because, from the point of view of speculators,
margin requirements in the futures market are less onerous than margin
requirements in the cash market, increased participation by speculators in the
futures market could cause temporary price distortions. Due to the possibility
of price distortions in the futures market and because of the imperfect
correlation between movements in the prices of securities or other assets and
movements in the prices of futures contracts, a correct forecast of market
trends by the investment manager still may not result in a successful hedging
transaction. A Portfolio could also experience losses if it could not close out
its futures position because of an illiquid secondary market. If any of these
events should occur, a Portfolio could lose money on the financial futures
contracts and also on the value of its portfolio assets. The costs incurred in
connection with futures transactions could reduce a Portfolio's return.
 
Index options involve risks similar to those risks relating to transactions in
financial futures contracts described above. Also, an option purchased by a
Portfolio may expire worthless, in which case a Portfolio would lose the premium
paid therefor.
 
                                       17
<PAGE>   51
 
A Portfolio may engage in futures transactions only on commodities exchanges or
boards of trade. A Portfolio will not engage in transactions in index options,
financial futures contracts or related options for speculation, but only as an
attempt to hedge against changes in interest rates or market conditions
affecting the values of securities which the Portfolio owns or intends to
purchase.
 
FOREIGN CURRENCY TRANSACTIONS. As indicated under "Investment Objectives,
Policies and Risk Factors--Special Risk Factors--Foreign Securities," the Total
Return, High Yield, Equity and Small Cap Portfolios may invest a limited portion
of their assets, and the International Portfolio may invest without limit, in
securities denominated in foreign currencies. These Portfolios may engage in
foreign currency transactions in connection with their investments in foreign
securities but will not speculate in foreign currency exchange.
 
The value of the foreign securities investments of a Portfolio measured in U.S.
Dollars may be affected favorably or unfavorably by changes in foreign currency
exchange rates and exchange control regulations, and the Portfolio may incur
costs in connection with conversions between various currencies. A Portfolio
will conduct its foreign currency exchange transactions either on a spot (i.e.,
cash) basis at the spot rate prevailing in the foreign currency exchange market,
or through forward contracts to purchase or sell foreign currencies. A forward
foreign currency exchange contract involves an obligation to purchase or sell a
specific currency at a future date, which may be any fixed number of days from
the date of the contract agreed upon by the parties, at a price set at the time
of the contract. These contracts are traded directly between currency traders
(usually large commercial banks) and their customers.
 
When a Portfolio enters into a contract for the purchase or sale of a security
denominated in a foreign currency, it may want to establish the U.S. Dollar cost
or proceeds, as the case may be. By entering into a forward contract in U.S.
Dollars for the purchase or sale of the amount of foreign currency involved in
an underlying security transaction, the Portfolio is able to protect itself
against a possible loss between trade and settlement date resulting from an
adverse change in the relationship between the U.S. Dollar and such foreign
currency. However, this tends to limit potential gains that might result from a
positive change in such currency relationships. A Portfolio may also hedge its
foreign currency exchange rate risk by engaging in currency financial futures
and options transactions.
 
When the investment manager believes that the currency of a particular foreign
country may suffer a substantial decline against the U.S. Dollar, it may enter
into a forward contract to sell an amount of foreign currency approximating the
value of some or all of the Portfolio's securities denominated in such foreign
currency. In this situation the International Portfolio may, instead, enter into
a forward contract to sell a different foreign currency for a fixed U.S. Dollar
amount when the investment manager believes that the U.S. Dollar value of the
currency to be sold pursuant to the forward contract will fall whenever there is
a decline in the U.S. Dollar value of the currency in which portfolio securities
of the International Portfolio are denominated ("cross-hedge"). The forecasting
of short-term currency market movement is extremely difficult and whether such a
short-term hedging strategy will be successful is highly uncertain.
 
It is impossible to forecast with precision the market value of portfolio
securities at the expiration of a contract. Accordingly, it may be necessary for
a Portfolio to purchase additional currency on the spot market (and bear the
expense of such purchase) if the market value of the security is less than the
amount of foreign currency the Portfolio is obligated to deliver when a decision
is made to sell the security and make delivery of the foreign currency in
settlement of a forward contract. Conversely, it may be necessary to sell on the
spot market some of the foreign currency received upon the sale of the portfolio
security if its market value exceeds the amount of foreign currency the
Portfolio is obligated to deliver.
 
The Portfolios will not speculate in foreign currency exchange. A Portfolio will
not enter into such forward contracts or maintain a net exposure in such
contracts where the Fund would be obligated to deliver an amount of foreign
currency in excess of the value of the Portfolio's securities or other assets
(a) denominated in that currency or (b), in the case of a "cross-hedge" for the
International Portfolio, denominated in a currency or currencies that the Fund's
investment manager believes will have price movements that closely correlate
with that currency. The Fund's custodian bank segregates cash or liquid
high-grade debt securities in an amount not less than the value of each
Portfolio's total assets committed to forward foreign currency exchange
contracts entered into for the purchase of a foreign currency. If the value of
the securities segregated declines, additional cash or securities are added so
that the segregated amount is not less than the amount of the Portfolio's
commitments with respect to such contracts. The Portfolios do not intend to
enter into such forward contracts if they would have more than 15% of the value
of their total assets committed to such contracts. A Portfolio generally does
not enter into a forward contract with a term longer than one year.
 
RISK CONSIDERATIONS. The Statement of Additional Information contains further
information about the characteristics, risks and possible benefits of options,
futures and foreign currency transactions. See "Investment Policies and
Techniques" in the Statement of Additional Information. The principal risks are:
(a) possible imperfect correlation
 
                                       18
<PAGE>   52
 
between movements in the prices of options, currencies or futures contracts and
movements in the prices of the securities or currencies hedged or used for
cover; (b) lack of assurance that a liquid secondary market will exist for any
particular option, futures or foreign currency contract at any particular time;
(c) the need for additional skills and techniques beyond those required for
normal portfolio management; (d) losses on futures contracts resulting from
market movements not anticipated by the investment manager; and (e) the possible
need to defer closing out certain options or futures contracts in order to
continue to qualify for beneficial tax treatment afforded regulated investment
companies under the Internal Revenue Code.
 
DELAYED DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS.  The Total Return, High Yield, Equity and
Government Securities Portfolios may purchase or sell portfolio securities on a
when-issued or delayed delivery basis. When-issued or delayed delivery
transactions arise when securities are purchased by a Portfolio with payment and
delivery to take place in the future in order to secure what is considered to be
an advantageous price and yield to the Portfolio at the time of entering into
the transactions. The value of fixed yield securities to be delivered in the
future will fluctuate as interest rates vary. Because a Portfolio must set aside
cash or liquid high grade securities to satisfy its commitments to purchase
when-issued or delayed delivery securities, flexibility to manage the
Portfolio's investments may be limited if commitments to purchase when-issued or
delayed delivery securities were to exceed 25% of the value of its assets.
 
To the extent a Portfolio engages in when-issued or delayed delivery
transactions, it will do so for the purpose of acquiring portfolio securities
consistent with the Portfolio's investment objective and policies and not for
the purpose of investment leverage or to speculate in interest rate changes. A
Portfolio will make commitments to purchase securities on a when-issued or
delayed delivery basis only with the intention of actually acquiring the
securities, but a Portfolio reserves the right to sell these securities before
the settlement date if deemed advisable.
 
In some instances, the third-party seller of when-issued or delayed delivery
securities may determine prior to the settlement date that it will be unable to
meet its existing transaction commitments without borrowing securities. If
advantageous from a yield perspective, a Portfolio may, in that event, agree to
resell its purchase commitment to the third-party seller at the current market
price on the date of sale and concurrently enter into another purchase
commitment for such securities at a later date. As an inducement for a Portfolio
to "roll over" its purchase commitment, the Portfolio may receive a negotiated
fee.
 
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS.  Each Portfolio may invest in repurchase agreements,
under which it acquires ownership of a security and the broker-dealer or bank
agrees to repurchase the security at a mutually agreed upon time and price,
thereby determining the yield during the Portfolio's holding period. The
investment manager will evaluate the creditworthiness of all entities with which
the Fund intends to engage in repurchase agreements pursuant to procedures
adopted by the Board of Trustees of the Fund. Maturity of the securities subject
to repurchase may exceed one year. In the event of a bankruptcy or other default
of a seller of a repurchase agreement, the Portfolio might have expenses in
enforcing its rights, and could experience losses, including a decline in the
value of the underlying securities and loss of income. Repurchase agreements
maturing in more than seven days will be considered illiquid for purposes of the
Portfolios' limitations on illiquid securities.
 
SECTION 4(2) PAPER.  Subject to its investment objectives and policies, a
Portfolio may invest in commercial paper issued by major corporations under the
Securities Act of 1933 in reliance on the exemption from registration afforded
by Section 3(a)(3) thereof. Such commercial paper may be issued only to finance
current transactions and must mature in nine months or less. Trading of such
commercial paper is conducted primarily by institutional investors through
investment dealers, and individual investor participation in the commercial
paper market is very limited. A Portfolio also may invest in commercial paper
issued in reliance on the so-called "private placement" exemption from
registration afforded by Section 4(2) of the Securities Act of 1933 ("Section
4(2) paper"). Section 4(2) paper is restricted as to disposition under the
federal securities laws, and generally is sold to institutional investors such
as a Portfolio who agree that they are purchasing the paper for investment and
not with a view to public distribution. Any resale by the purchaser must be in
an exempt transaction. Section 4(2) paper normally is resold to other
institutional investors like the Portfolio through or with the assistance of the
issuer or investment dealers who make a market in the Section 4(2) paper, thus
providing liquidity. The Fund's investment adviser considers the legally
restricted but readily saleable Section 4(2) paper to be liquid; however,
pursuant to procedures approved by the Board of Trustees of the Fund, if a
particular investment in Section 4(2) paper is not determined to be liquid, that
investment will be included within the 10% limitation on illiquid securities.
The Fund's investment manager monitors the liquidity of the Fund's investments
in Section 4(2) paper on a continuing basis.
 
COLLATERALIZED OBLIGATIONS. Subject to its investment objectives and policies, a
Portfolio may purchase collateralized obligations, including interest only
("IO") and principal only ("PO") securities. A collateralized obligation is a
debt security issued by a corporation, trust or custodian, or by a U.S.
Government agency or instrumentality, that is
 
                                       19
<PAGE>   53
 
collateralized by a portfolio or pool of mortgages, mortgage-backed securities,
U.S. Government securities or other assets. The issuer's obligation to make
interest and principal payments is secured by the underlying pool or portfolio
of securities. Collateralized obligations issued or guaranteed by a U.S.
Government agency or instrumentality, such as the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation, are considered U.S. Government securities for purposes of this
prospectus. Privately-issued collateralized obligations collateralized by a
portfolio of U.S. Government securities are not direct obligations of the U.S.
Government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities and are not considered
U.S. Government securities for purposes of this prospectus. A variety of types
of collateralized obligations are available currently and others may become
available in the future.
 
Since the collateralized obligations may be issued in classes with varying
maturities and interest rates, the investor may obtain greater predictability of
maturity than with direct investments in mortgage-backed securities. Classes
with shorter maturities may have lower volatility and lower yield while those
with longer maturities may have higher volatility and higher yield. This
provides the investor with greater control over the characteristics of the
investment in a changing interest rate environment. With respect to interest
only and principal only securities, an investor has the option to select from a
pool of underlying collateral the portion of the cash flows that most closely
corresponds to the investor's forecast of interest rate movements. These
instruments tend to be highly sensitive to prepayment rates on the underlying
collateral and thus place a premium on accurate prepayment projections by the
investor.
 
A Portfolio, other than the Money Market Portfolio, may invest in collateralized
obligations whose yield floats inversely against a specified index rate. These
"inverse floaters" are more volatile than conventional fixed or floating rate
collateralized obligations and the yield thereon, as well as the value thereof,
will fluctuate in inverse proportion to changes in the index upon which rate
adjustments are based. As a result, the yield on an inverse floater will
generally increase when market yields (as reflected by the index) decrease and
decrease when market yields increase. The extent of the volatility of inverse
floaters depends on the extent of anticipated changes in market rates of
interest. Generally, inverse floaters provide for interest rate adjustments
based upon a multiple of the specified interest index, which further increases
their volatility. The degree of additional volatility will be directly
proportional to the size of the multiple used in determining interest rate
adjustments.
 
Additional information concerning collateralized obligations is contained in the
Statement of Additional Information under "Investment Policies and
Techniques--Collateralized Obligations."
 
                                NET ASSET VALUE
 
TOTAL RETURN, HIGH YIELD, EQUITY, GOVERNMENT SECURITIES, INTERNATIONAL AND SMALL
CAP PORTFOLIOS. The net asset value per share is determined by calculating the
total value of a Portfolio's assets, deducting total liabilities, and dividing
the result by the number of shares outstanding of such Portfolio. Portfolio
securities traded on a domestic securities exchange or securities listed on the
NASDAQ National Market are valued at the last sale price on the exchange or
market where primarily traded or listed or, if there is no recent sale price
available, at the last current bid quotation. Portfolio securities that are
primarily traded on foreign securities exchanges are generally valued at the
preceding closing values of such securities on their respective exchanges where
primarily traded. A security that is listed or traded on more than one exchange
is valued at the quotation on the exchange determined to be the primary market
for that security by the Board of Trustees or its delegates. Securities not so
traded or listed are valued at the last current bid quotation if market
quotations are available. Fixed income securities are valued by using market
quotations, or independent pricing services that use prices provided by market
makers or estimates of market values obtained from yield data relating to
instruments or securities with similar characteristics. Equity options are
valued at the last sale price unless the bid price is higher or the asked price
is lower, in which event such bid or asked price is used. Exchange traded fixed
income options are valued at the last sale price unless there is no sale price,
in which event current prices provided by market makers are used.
Over-the-counter traded fixed income options are valued based upon current
prices provided by market makers. Financial futures and options thereon are
valued at the settlement price established each day by the board of trade or
exchange on which they are traded. Other securities and assets are valued at
fair value as determined in good faith by the Board of Trustees. Because of the
need to obtain prices as of the close of trading on various exchanges throughout
the world; the calculation of net asset value does not necessarily take place
contemporaneously with the determination of the prices of a Portfolio's foreign
securities. For purposes of determining a Portfolio's net asset value, any
assets and liabilities initially expressed in foreign currency values will be
converted into U.S. Dollar values at the mean between the bid and offered
quotations of such currencies against U.S. Dollars as last quoted by a
recognized dealer. If an event were to occur, after the value of a security was
so established but before the net asset value per share was determined, which
was likely to materially change the net asset value, then that security would be
valued using fair value considerations by the Board of Trustees or its
delegates. On each day the New York Stock Exchange ("Exchange") is open for
trading, the net asset value is determined as of the earlier of 3:00 p.m.
Central time or the
 
                                       20
<PAGE>   54
 
close of the Exchange, except that the net asset value will not be computed on a
day in which no order to purchase shares was received or no shares were tendered
for redemption.
 
MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO. The net asset value per share of the Money Market
Portfolio is determined at 11:00 a.m. and as of the earlier of 3:00 p.m. Central
time or the close of the Exchange on each day the Exchange is open for trading,
except that the net asset value will not be computed on a day in which no orders
to purchase shares were received or no shares were tendered for redemption. The
net asset value per share is determined by dividing the total assets of the
Portfolio minus its liabilities by the total number of its shares outstanding.
The net asset value per share of the Money Market Portfolio is ordinarily $1.00
calculated at amortized cost in accordance with Rule 2a-7 under the 1940 Act.
While this rule provides certainty in valuation, it may result in periods during
which value, as determined by amortized cost, is higher or lower than the price
the Portfolio would have received if all its investments were sold. Under the
direction of the Board of Trustees, certain procedures have been adopted to
monitor and stabilize the price per share for the Portfolio. Calculations are
made to compare the value of its investments valued at amortized cost with
market-based values. Market-based values will be obtained by using actual
quotations provided by market makers, estimates of market value, or values
obtained from yield data relating to classes of money market instruments or
government securities published by reputable sources at the mean between the bid
and asked prices for the instruments. In the event that a deviation of 1/2 of 1%
or more exists between the Portfolio's $1.00 per share net asset value,
calculated at amortized cost, and the net asset value calculated by reference to
market-based quotations, or if there is any other deviation that the Board of
Trustees believes would result in a material dilution to shareholders or
purchasers, the Board of Trustees will promptly consider what action, if any,
should be initiated. In order to value its investments at amortized cost, the
Money Market Portfolio purchases only securities with a maturity of one year or
less and maintains a dollar-weighted average portfolio maturity of 90 days or
less. In addition, the Money Market Portfolio limits its portfolio investments
to securities that meet the quality and diversification requirements of Rule
2a-7. Under the quality requirements of Rule 2a-7, the Money Market Portfolio
may only purchase U.S. Dollar-denominated instruments that are determined to
present minimal credit risks and that are at the time of acquisition "Eligible
Securities" as defined in Rule 2a-7. "Eligible Securities" under Rule 2a-7
include only securities that are rated in the top two rating categories by the
required number of nationally recognized statistical rating organizations (at
least two or, if only one such organization has rated the security that one
organization) or, if unrated, are deemed comparable in quality. The
diversification requirements of Rule 2a-7 provide generally that the Fund may
not at the time of acquisition invest more than 5% of its assets in securities
of any one issuer or invest more than 5% of its assets in securities that are
Eligible Securities that have not been rated in the highest category by the
required number of rating organizations or, if unrated, have not been deemed
comparable in quality, except U.S. Government securities and repurchase
agreements of such securities.
 
                            PURCHASE AND REDEMPTION
 
The separate accounts of the Participating Insurance Companies place orders to
purchase and redeem shares of each Portfolio based on, among other things, the
amount of premium payments to be invested and surrender and transfer requests to
be effected on that day pursuant to VLI and VA contracts. The shares of Total
Return, High Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and Small Cap
Portfolios are each purchased and redeemed at the net asset value of each
Portfolio's shares determined that same day or, in the case of an order not
resulting automatically from VLI and VA contract transactions, next determined
after an order in proper form is received. An order is considered to be in
proper form if it is communicated by telephone or wire by an authorized employee
of the Participating Life Insurance Company.
 
From time to time, the Fund may temporarily suspend the offering of shares of
one or more of its Portfolios. During the period of such suspension,
shareholders of such Portfolio are normally permitted to continue to purchase
additional shares and to have dividends reinvested.
 
The Fund seeks to have its Money Market Portfolio as fully invested as possible
at all times in order to achieve maximum income. Since the Money Market
Portfolio will be investing in instruments which normally require immediate
payment in Federal funds (monies credited to a bank's account with its regional
Federal Reserve Bank), the Fund has adopted certain procedures for the
convenience of its shareholders and to ensure that the Money Market Portfolio
receives investable funds.
 
No fee is charged the shareholders when they purchase or redeem Portfolio
shares.
 
                                       21
<PAGE>   55
 
                              DIVIDENDS AND TAXES
 
DIVIDENDS FOR MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO. The Money Market Portfolio's net
investment income is declared as a dividend daily. Shareholders will receive
dividends monthly in additional shares. If a shareholder withdraws its entire
account, all dividends accrued to the time of withdrawal will be paid at that
time.
 
DIVIDENDS FOR ALL PORTFOLIOS EXCEPT MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO. The Fund normally
follows the practice of declaring and distributing substantially all the net
investment income and any net short-term and long-term capital gains of these
Portfolios at least annually.
 
TAXES.  Under the current Internal Revenue Code ("Code"), Participating
Insurance Companies are taxed as life insurance companies and the operations of
their separate accounts are taxed as part of their total operations. Under
current interpretations of existing federal income tax law, investment income
and capital gains of separate accounts are not subject to federal income tax to
the extent applied to increase the values of VLI or VA contracts. Tax
consequences to VLI or VA contract holders are described in the separate
prospectuses issued by the Participating Insurance Companies.
 
Each Portfolio intends to continue to qualify as a regulated investment company
under subchapter M of the Code. As a result, with respect to any fiscal year in
which a Portfolio distributes all its net investment income and net realized
capital gains, that Portfolio will not be subject to federal income tax.
Subchapter M includes other requirements relating to the diversification of
investments. Subchapter M's diversification requirements are in addition to
diversification requirements under Section 817(h) of the Code and the 1940 Act.
Each applicable law's diversification requirement could require the sale of
assets of a Portfolio, which could have an adverse impact on the net asset value
of such Portfolio.
 
The preceding is a brief summary of certain of the relevant tax considerations.
The Statement of Additional Information includes a more detailed discussion.
This discussion is not intended, even as supplemented by the Statement of
Additional Information, as a complete explanation or a substitute for careful
tax planning and consultation with individual tax advisers.
 
                   CAPITAL STRUCTURE AND GENERAL INFORMATION
 
The Fund was organized as a business trust under the laws of Massachusetts on
March 24, 1987. The Fund may issue an unlimited number of shares of beneficial
interest all having no par value. Since the Fund offers multiple Portfolios, it
is known as a "series company." Shares of a Portfolio have equal noncumulative
voting rights and equal rights with respect to dividends, assets and liquidation
of such Portfolio. Shares are fully paid and nonassessable when issued, and have
no preemptive or conversion rights. The Fund is not required to hold annual
shareholders' meetings and does not intend to do so. However, it will hold
special meetings as required or deemed desirable for such purposes as electing
trustees, changing fundamental policies or approving an investment advisory
contract. If shares of more than one Portfolio are outstanding, shareholders
will vote by Portfolio and not in the aggregate except when voting in the
aggregate is required under the 1940 Act, such as for the election of trustees.
The Board of Trustees may authorize the issuance of additional Portfolios if
deemed desirable, each with its own investment objective, policies and
restrictions.
 
On November 3, 1989, KILICO Money Market Separate Account, KILICO Total Return
Separate Account, KILICO Income Separate Account and KILICO Equity Separate
Account (collectively, the Accounts), which were separate accounts organized as
open-end management investment companies, were restructured into one continuing
separate account (KILICO Variable Annuity Separate Account) in unit investment
trust form with subaccounts investing in corresponding Portfolios of the Fund.
An additional subaccount also was created to invest in the Fund's Government
Securities Portfolio. The restructuring and combining of the Accounts is
referred to as the Reorganization. In connection with the Reorganization,
approximately $550,000,000 in assets was added to the Fund (which at that time
consisted of approximately $6,000,000 in assets). Because the assets added to
the Fund as a result of the Reorganization were significantly greater than the
existing assets of the Fund, the per share financial highlights of the Money
Market, Total Return, High Yield and Equity Portfolios in this Prospectus
reflect the Accounts as the continuing entities.
 
Information about the Portfolios' investment performance is contained in the
Fund's 1994 Annual Report to Shareholders, which may be obtained without charge
from the Fund.
 
Shareholder inquiries should be made by writing the Fund at the address shown on
the front cover of this Prospectus.
 
                                       22
<PAGE>   56
 
                               INVESTMENT MANAGER
 
INVESTMENT MANAGER. Kemper Financial Services, Inc. ("KFS"), 120 South LaSalle
Street, Chicago, Illinois 60603, is the investment manager of the Fund and
provides the Fund with continuous professional investment supervision. KFS is
one of the largest investment managers in the country and has been engaged in
the management of investment funds for more than forty-five years. KFS and its
affiliates provide investment advice and manage investment portfolios for the
Kemper Funds, the Kemper insurance companies, Kemper Corporation and other
corporate, pension, profit-sharing and individual accounts representing
approximately $60 billion under management. KFS acts as investment adviser for
24 open-end and seven closed-end investment companies, with 60 separate
investment portfolios representing more than 3 million shareholder accounts. KFS
is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Kemper Financial Companies, Inc., which is a
financial services holding company that is more than 96% owned by Kemper
Corporation, a diversified insurance and financial services holding company.
 
Kemper Corporation has entered into an agreement in principle with an investor
group led by Zurich Insurance Company ("Zurich") pursuant to which Kemper
Corporation would be acquired by the investor group in a merger transaction. As
part of the transaction, Zurich or an affiliate would purchase KFS.
 
A definitive agreement is expected in early May, 1995, subject to the completion
of the investor group's due diligence. Consummation of the transaction is
subject to a number of contingencies, including approval by the board and
stockholders of Kemper Corporation and the Zurich board and regulatory
approvals. Because the transaction would constitute an assignment of the Fund's
investment management agreement with KFS under the Investment Company Act of
1940, and therefore a termination of such agreement, the transaction is subject
also to approval of new agreements by Kemper Fund boards and shareholders. If
the contingencies are timely met, the transaction is expected to close early in
the fourth quarter of 1995.
 
After consummation of the transaction, it is anticipated that the KFS management
team and the Kemper Fund portfolio managers would remain in place and that the
Kemper Funds would be operated in the same manner as they are currently.
 
Responsibility for overall management of the Fund rests with the Board of
Trustees and officers of the Fund. Professional investment supervision is
provided by KFS. The investment management agreement provides that KFS shall act
as the Fund's investment adviser, manage its investments and provide it with
various services and facilities. For its services, KFS is paid a management fee
at an effective annual rate, payable monthly, of .50%, .55%, .60%, .60%, .55%,
 .75% and .65% of average daily net assets of the Money Market, Total Return,
High Yield, Equity, Government Securities, International and Small
Capitalization Equity Portfolios, respectively. KFS may from time to time use
the services of Kemper Investment Management Company Limited ("KIMCO"), 1 Fleet
Place, London EC4M 7RQ, a wholly owned subsidiary of KFS, with respect to
foreign securities investments of the Portfolios including analysis, research,
execution and trading services.
 
Frank J. Rachwalski, Jr. is the portfolio manager of the Money Market Portfolio.
He has served in this capacity since the Portfolio commenced operations in 1982.
Mr. Rachwalski joined KFS in January 1973 and is currently a Senior Vice
President of KFS and a Vice President of the Fund. He received a B.B.A. and an
M.B.A. from Loyola University, Chicago, Illinois.
 
Karen A. Hussey has been the portfolio manager of the Small Cap Portfolio since
September 1994 when she joined KFS. She is a Vice President of the Fund. Prior
to joining KFS, she was a portfolio manager for a national bank. She received a
B.S. from Southwest Missouri State, Springfield, Missouri and did graduate work
towards an M.B.A. at St. Louis University. Ms. Hussey is a Chartered Financial
Analyst.
 
Dennis H. Ferro has been the portfolio manager for the International Portfolio
since March 1994 when he joined KFS. He is an Executive Vice President and the
Director of International Equity Investments of KFS and a Vice President of the
Fund. Mr. Ferro was President, Managing Director and Chief Investment Officer of
an international investment advisory firm prior to joining KFS. He received a
B.A. in Political Science from Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania and
an MBA in Finance from St. Johns University, Jamaica, New York. Mr. Ferro is a
Chartered Financial Analyst.
 
Michael A. McNamara (since 1990) and Harry E. Resis, Jr. (since 1993) are the
co-portfolios managers of the High Yield Portfolio. Mr. McNamara joined KFS in
February 1972 and is currently a Senior Vice President of KFS and a Vice
President of the Fund. He received a B.S. in Business Administration from the
University of Missouri, St. Louis, Missouri, and an M.B.A. in Finance from
Loyola University, Chicago, Illinois. Mr. Resis joined KFS in 1988 and is
currently a First Vice President of KFS and a Vice President of the Fund. He
received a B.A. in Finance from Michigan State University, Lansing, Michigan.
Mr. Resis holds a number of NYSE and NASD licenses.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>   57
 
C. Beth Cotner has been the portfolio manager of the Equity Portfolio since
1986. Ms. Cotner joined KFS in January 1985 and is currently an Executive Vice
President and the Director of Domestic Equity Portfolio Management of KFS and a
Vice President of the Fund. She received a B.A. from Ohio State University,
Columbus, Ohio, and an M.B.A. from George Washington University, Washington,
D.C.
 
Paul F. Sloan has been the portfolio manager of the Government Securities
Portfolio since April 1995 when he joined KFS. Prior to joining KFS, Mr. Sloan
was the Director of Institutional Portfolio Management at an investment
management company and prior thereto he was a Vice President and Investment
Officer for a regional bank. He received a B.A. in English Literature from the
University of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan, and an M.B.A. in Finance and Business
Economics from Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan.
 
Gary A. Langbaum has been the portfolio manager for the Total Return Portfolio
since February 1995. He is assisted by investment personnel who specialize in
certain areas. Mr. Langbaum joined KFS in 1988 and is currently an Executive
Vice President of KFS. He received a B.A. in Finance from the University of
Maryland, College Park, Maryland.
 
KFS has an Equity Investment Committee that determines overall investment
strategy for equity portfolios managed by KFS. The Equity Investment Committee
is currently comprised of the following members: Daniel J. Bukowski, Tracy
McCormick Chester, C. Beth Cotner, James H. Coxon, Richard A. Goers, Karen A.
Hussey, Frank D. Korth, Gary A. Langbaum, James R. Neel, Thomas M. Regner and
Stephen B. Timbers. The portfolio managers work together as a team with the
Equity Investment Committee and various equity analysts and equity traders to
manage the Fund's equity Portfolios. Equity analysts--through research, analysis
and evaluation--work to develop investment ideas appropriate for these
Portfolios. These ideas are studied and debated by the Equity Investment
Committee and, if approved, are added to a list of eligible investments. The
portfolio managers use the list of eligible securities to help them structure
the Portfolios in a manner consistent with each Portfolio's objective. The KFS
international investments area, directed by Dennis H. Ferro, provides research
and analysis regarding foreign investments to the portfolio managers. After
investment decisions are made, equity traders execute the portfolio manager's
instructions through various broker-dealer firms.
 
KFS also has a Fixed Income Investment Committee that determines overall
investment strategy for fixed income portfolios managed by KFS. The Fixed
Income Committee is currently comprised of the following members: J. Patrick
Beimford, Jr., Frank E. Collecchia, George Klein, Michael A. McNamara,
Christopher J. Mier, Frank J. Rachwalski, Jr., Harry E. Resis, Jr., Robert H.
Schumacher, John E. Silvia, Paul F. Sloan and Christopher T. Vincent. The
portfolio managers work together as a team with the Fixed Income Committee and
various fixed income analysts and traders to manage the Fund's fixed income
Portfolios. Analysts provide market, economic and financial research and
analysis that is used by the Fixed Income Committee to establish broad
parameters for these Portfolios, including duration and cash levels. In
addition, credit research by analysts is used by portfolio managers in selecting
securities appropriate for the Portfolios' policies. The KFS international
investments area provides research and analysis regarding foreign investments to
the fixed income portfolio managers, as it does for the equity portfolio
managers. After investment decisions are made, fixed income traders execute the
portfolio manager's instructions through various broker-dealer firms.
 
CUSTODIAN.  Investors Fiduciary Trust Company ("IFTC"), 127 West 10th Street,
Kansas City, Missouri 64105, as custodian, and the United Missouri Bank, n.a.,
Tenth and Grand Streets, Kansas City, Missouri 64106 and State Street Bank and
Trust Company, 225 Franklin Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02110, as
sub-custodians, have custody of all securities and cash of the Fund maintained
in the United States. The Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A., Chase MetroTech Center,
Brooklyn, New York 11245, as custodian, has custody of all securities and cash
held outside the United States. They attend to the collection of principal and
income, and payment for and collection of proceeds of securities bought and sold
by the Fund. IFTC is also the Fund's transfer agent and dividend-paying agent.
IFTC receives an annual custodian fee from the Portfolios of $.085 for each
$1,000 of average monthly net assets plus certain transaction charges and
out-of-pocket expense reimbursements subject to the custody agreement. For its
services as custodian and transfer agent for the fiscal year ended December 31,
1994, IFTC received fees of $514,000. Prior to February 1, 1995, IFTC was 50%
owned by KFS.
 
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS.  KFS places all orders for purchases and sales of a
Portfolio's securities. Subject to seeking best execution of orders, KFS may
consider sales of shares of the Fund and other funds managed by KFS or variable
life insurance and variable annuity contracts funded by the Fund as a factor in
selecting broker-dealers. See "Portfolio Transactions" in the Statement of
Additional Information.
 
Each Portfolio pays its respective fees and expenses of independent auditors,
counsel, custodian, the cost of reports and notices to owners of VLI and VA
contracts, brokerage commissions or transaction costs, taxes and registration
fees.
 
                                       24
<PAGE>   58
 
                                  DISTRIBUTOR
 
Kemper Distributors, Inc. ("KDI"), an affiliate of KFS, serves as distributor
and principal underwriter for the Fund pursuant to an underwriting agreement.
KDI bears all its expenses of providing services pursuant to the agreement. KDI
provides for the preparation of advertising or sales literature, and bears the
cost of printing and mailing prospectuses to persons other than shareholders.
KDI bears the cost of qualifying and maintaining the qualification of Fund
shares for sale under the securities laws of Massachusetts and the Fund bears
the expense of registering its shares with the Securities and Exchange
Commission. KDI will pay all fees and expenses in connection with its
qualification and registration as a broker or dealer under Federal and state
laws, a portion of the toll free telephone service and of computer terminals,
and of any activity which is primarily intended to result in the sale of shares
issued by the Fund, unless a plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act
("12b-1 Plan") is in effect that provides that the Fund shall bear some or all
of such expenses.
 
KDI currently offers shares of each Portfolio of the Fund continuously to the
separate accounts of Participating Insurance Companies where permitted by
applicable law. The underwriting agreement provides that KDI accepts orders for
shares at net asset value, as no sales commission or load is charged. KDI has
made no firm commitment to acquire shares of the Fund.
 
NOTE: Although the Fund does not currently have a 12b-1 Plan and shareholder
approval would be required in order to adopt one, the underwriting agreement
provides that the Fund will also pay those fees and expenses permitted to be
paid or assumed by the Fund pursuant to a 12b-1 Plan, if any, adopted by the
Fund, notwithstanding any other provision to the contrary in the underwriting
agreement, and the Fund or a third party will pay those fees and expenses not
specifically allocated to KDI in the underwriting agreement.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>   59
 
APPENDIX--PORTFOLIO COMPOSITION OF HIGH YIELD BONDS
 
The table below reflects the composition by quality rating of the investment
portfolio of the High Yield Portfolio. Percentages for the Portfolio reflect the
net asset weighted average of the percentage for each category on the last day
of each month in the 12 month period ended December 31, 1994. The table reflects
the percentage of net assets represented by fixed income securities rated by
Moody's or S&P, by non-rated fixed income securities and by other assets. The
percentage shown reflects the higher of the Moody's or S&P rating. U.S.
Government securities, whether or not rated, are reflected as Aaa and AAA
(highest quality). Cash equivalents include money market instruments, repurchase
agreements, net payables and receivables and cash. Other assets include options,
financial futures contracts and equity securities. As noted under "Investment
Objectives, Policies and Risk Factors," the High Yield Portfolio invests in high
yielding, fixed income securities without relying upon published ratings. The
allocations in the table are not necessarily representative of the composition
of the Portfolio at other times. Portfolio composition will change over time.
 
    END OF THE MONTH COMPOSITION OF PORTFOLIO BY QUALITY AS A PERCENTAGE OF
                    NET ASSETS (JANUARY 1994--DECEMBER 1994)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                       HIGH
         MOODY'S/S&P RATING            YIELD                     GENERAL DESCRIPTION
          OR OTHER CATEGORY            PORTFOLIO                   OF BOND QUALITY
-------------------------------------  ----       -------------------------------------------------
<S>                                    <C>        <C>
Cash Equivalents.....................     6%
Aaa/AAA..............................     2       Highest quality
Aa/AA................................     0       High quality
A/A..................................     0       Upper medium grade
Baa/BBB..............................     0       Medium grade
Ba/BB................................    18       Some speculative elements
B/B..................................    61       Speculative
Caa/CCC..............................     6       More speculative
Ca/CC, C/C...........................     1       Very speculative
D....................................     1       In default
Non-rated, Not in Default............     2
Non-rated, In Default................     0
Other Assets.........................     3
                                       ----
Net Assets...........................   100%
</TABLE>
 
The description of each bond quality category set forth in the table above is
intended to be a general guide and not a definitive statement as to how Moody's
and S&P define such rating category. A more complete description of the rating
categories is set forth under "Appendix--Ratings of Investments" in the
Statement of Additional Information. The ratings of Moody's and S&P represent
their opinions as to the quality of the securities that they undertake to rate.
It should be emphasized, however, that ratings are relative and subjective and
are not absolute standards of quality.
 
                                       26
<PAGE>   60

[KEMPER LOGO]


KEMPER ADVANTAGE III
A Flexible Payment Fixed and Variable Annuity from
Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company
1 Kemper Drive, Long Grove, IL 60049


Issued by Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company
Securities distributed by Investors Brokerage Services, Inc.


                           [RECYCLED LOGO]
ADV 01 (5/95)         PRINTED ON RECYCLED PAPER        Policy Form Series L-1000
<PAGE>   61
 
                      STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
                                  MAY 1, 1995
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                PERIODIC PAYMENT
 
                           VARIABLE ANNUITY CONTRACTS
 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
                                   ISSUED BY
 
                    KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
 
                               IN CONNECTION WITH
 
                    KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
   HOME OFFICE: 1 KEMPER DRIVE, LONG GROVE, ILLINOIS 60049     (708) 320-4500
 
This Statement of Additional Information is not a prospectus. This Statement of
Additional Information should be read in conjunction with the Prospectus of the
Separate Account dated May 1, 1995. The Prospectus may be obtained from Kemper
Investors Life Insurance Company by writing or calling the address or telephone
number listed above.
 
                               ------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   PAGE
                                                                                   ----
          <S>                                                                      <C>
          Services to the Separate Account.......................................  B-1
          Performance Information of Subaccounts.................................  B-1
          State Regulation.......................................................  B-8
          Experts................................................................  B-8
          Financial Statements...................................................  B-8
</TABLE>
<PAGE>   62
 
                        SERVICES TO THE SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company ("KILICO") maintains the books and
records of the KILICO Variable Annuity Separate Account (the "Separate
Account"). KILICO holds the assets of the Separate Account. The assets are kept
segregated and held separate and apart from the general funds of KILICO. KILICO
maintains records of all purchases and redemptions of shares of each Portfolio
of the Kemper Investors Fund (the "Fund") by each of the Subaccounts. All
expenses incurred in the operations of the Separate Account, except the charge
for mortality and expense risk and administrative expenses, and records
maintenance charge (as described in the Prospectus) are borne by KILICO.
 
The independent auditors for the Separate Account are KPMG Peat Marwick LLP,
Chicago, Illinois. The firm performs an annual audit of the financial statements
of the Separate Account and KILICO.
 
The Contracts are sold by licensed insurance agents, where the Contracts may be
lawfully sold, who are registered representatives of broker-dealers which are
registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and are members of the
National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. The Contracts are distributed
through the principal underwriter for the Separate Account, Investors Brokerage
Services, Inc. ("IBS"), a wholly owned subsidiary of KILICO, which enters into
selling group agreements with affiliated and unaffiliated broker-dealers.
Subject to the provisions of the Contracts, units of the Subaccounts under the
Contract are offered on a continuous basis.
 
KILICO pays commissions to the seller which may vary but are not anticipated to
exceed in the aggregate an amount equal to six percent (6%) of Purchase
Payments. During 1994, 1993 and 1992, KILICO incurred gross commissions payable
of approximately $13,085,000, $15,143,000 and $18,600,000 to licensed insurance
agents.
 
                     PERFORMANCE INFORMATION OF SUBACCOUNTS
 
As described in the prospectus, a Subaccount's historical performance may be
shown in the form of "average annual total return" and "total return"
calculations in the case of all Subaccounts, except "average annual total
return" is not shown for the Money Market Subaccount; "yield" information may be
provided in the case of the High Yield Subaccount and the Government Securities
Subaccount; and "yield" and "effective yield" information may be provided in the
case of the Money Market Subaccount. These various measures of performance are
described below.
 
A Subaccount's average annual total return quotation is computed in accordance
with a standard method prescribed by rules of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. The average annual total return for a Subaccount for a specific
period is found by first taking a hypothetical $1,000 investment in each of the
Subaccount's units on the first day of the period at the maximum offering price,
which is the Accumulation Unit value per unit ("initial investment") and
computing the ending redeemable value ("redeemable value") of that investment at
the end of the period. The redeemable value reflects the effect of the
applicable Withdrawal Charge that may be imposed at the end of the period as
well as all other recurring charges and fees applicable under the Contract to
all Contract Owner accounts. Premium taxes are not included in the term charges.
The redeemable value is then divided by the initial investment and this quotient
is taken to the Nth root (N represents the number of years in the period) and 1
is subtracted from the result, which is then expressed as a percentage. Average
annual total return quotations for various periods are set forth in the table
below.
 
No standard formula has been prescribed for calculating total return
performance. Total return performance for a specific period is calculated by
first taking an investment (assumed to be $10,000 below) in each Subaccount's
units on the first day of the period at the maximum offering price, which is the
Accumulation Unit Value per unit ("initial investment") and computing the ending
value ("ending value") of that investment at the end of the period. The ending
value does not include the effect of the applicable Withdrawal Charge that may
be imposed at the end of the period, and thus may be higher than if such charge
were deducted. The total return percentage is then determined by subtracting the
initial investment from the ending value and dividing the remainder by the
initial investment and expressing the result as a percentage. An assumed
investment of $10,000 was chosen because that approximates the size of a typical
account. The account size used affects the performance figure because the
Records Maintenance Charge is a fixed per account charge. Total return
quotations for various periods are set forth in the table below.
 
The yield for the High Yield Subaccount and the Government Securities Subaccount
is computed in accordance with a standard method prescribed by rules of the
Securities and Exchange Commission. The yields for the High Yield Subaccount and
Government Securities Subaccount, based upon the one month period ended March
31, 1995 were 9.20% and 4.97%, respectively. The yield quotation is computed by
dividing the net investment income per
 
                                       B-1
<PAGE>   63
 
unit earned during the specified one month or 30-day period by the accumulation
unit values on the last day of the period, according to the following formula
that assumes a semi-annual reinvestment of income:
 
                                       a - b     6
                        YIELD =  2 [( ------- +1)  -1]
                                         cd
 
a = net dividends and interest earned during the period by the Fund attributable
    to the Subaccount
 
b = expenses accrued for the period (net of reimbursements)
 
c = the average daily number of Accumulation Units outstanding during the period
 
d = the Accumulation Unit value per unit on the last day of the period
 
The yield of each Subaccount reflects the deduction of all recurring fees and
charges applicable to each Subaccount, but does not reflect the deduction of
withdrawal charges or premium taxes.
 
The Money Market Subaccount's yield is computed in accordance with a standard
method prescribed by rules of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Under that
method, the current yield quotation is based on a seven-day period and computed
as follows: the net change in the Accumulation Unit Value during the period is
divided by the Accumulation Unit Value at the beginning of the period ("base
period return") and the result is divided by 7 and multiplied by 365 and the
current yield figure carried to the nearest one-hundredth of one percent.
Realized capital gains or losses and unrealized appreciation or depreciation of
the Account's portfolio are not included in the calculation. The Money Market
Subaccount's yield for the seven-day period ended March 31, 1995 was 4.26% and
average portfolio maturity was 27 days.
 
The Money Market Subaccount's effective yield is determined by taking the base
period return (computed as described above) and calculating the effect of
assumed compounding. The formula for the effective yield is: (base period return
+1) (3)65 L 7 - 1. The Money Market Subaccount's effective yield for the seven
day period ended March 31, 1995 was 4.35%.
 
In computing yield, the Separate Account follows certain standard accounting
practices specified by Securities and Exchange Commission rules. These practices
are not necessarily consistent with the accounting practices that the Separate
Account uses in the preparation of its annual and semi-annual financial
statements.
 
A Subaccount's performance quotations are based upon historical earnings and are
not necessarily representative of future performance. The Subaccount's units are
sold at Accumulation Unit value. Performance figures and Accumulation Unit value
will fluctuate. Factors affecting a Subaccount's performance include general
market conditions, operating expenses and investment management. Units of a
Subaccount are redeemable at Accumulation Unit value, which may be more or less
than original cost. The performance figures include the deduction of all
expenses and fees, including a prorated portion of the Records Maintenance
Charge. Redemptions within the first six years after purchase may be subject to
a Withdrawal Charge that ranges from 6% the first year to 0% after six years;
however, the aggregate Withdrawal Charge will not exceed 7.25% of aggregate
Purchase Payments under the Contract. Yield, effective yield and total return do
not reflect the effect of the Withdrawal Charge or premium taxes that may be
imposed upon the redemption of units. Average annual total return reflects the
effect of the applicable Withdrawal Charge (but not premium tax) that may be
imposed at the end of the period in question.
 
The figures below show performance information for periods from March 5, 1982
(inception) for the Money Market Subaccount, Total Return Subaccount and High
Yield Subaccount and for periods from December 9, 1983 (inception) for the
Equity Subaccount to December 31, 1994. This performance information is stated
to reflect that the Separate Account was reorganized on November 3, 1989 as a
unit investment trust with Subaccounts investing in corresponding Portfolios of
the Fund. In addition, on that date the Government Securities Subaccount was
added to the Separate Account to invest in the Fund's Government Securities
Portfolio. For the Government Securities Subaccount, performance figures will
reflect investment experience as if the Government Securities Subaccount had
been available under the Contracts since September 3, 1987, the inception date
of the Government Securities Portfolio. Performance of the Subaccounts will vary
from time to time, and these results are not necessarily representative of
future results. Performance information is also shown for the year ended
December 31, 1994. The total return performance of each Subaccount is calculated
for a specified period of time by assuming an initial Purchase Payment of
$10,000 fully allocated to each Separate Account and the deduction of all
expenses and fees, including a prorated portion of the $36 annual Records
Maintenance Charge. No withdrawals are assumed. The percentage increases are
determined by subtracting the initial Purchase Payment from the ending value and
dividing the remainder by the beginning value.
 
                                       B-2
<PAGE>   64
 
Comparative information for certain Subaccounts with respect to the Dow Jones
Industrial Average, the Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index, the Consumer Price
Index, the CDA Certificate of Deposit Index, the Lehman Brothers Government and
Corporate Bond Index, the Salomon Brothers High Grade Corporate Bond Index and
the Merrill Lynch Government/Corporate Master Index is also included.
Comparative information may be shown for the International Subaccount with
respect to the CDA Mutual Fund International Index and the Morgan Stanley
Capital International Europe Australia Far East Index. The Total Return and
Equity Subaccounts are compared to, and the International Subaccount may be
compared to, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and the Standard & Poor's 500
Stock Index because these indices are generally considered representative of the
U. S. stock market in general. The Consumer Price Index is generally considered
to be a measure of inflation and thus the performance of the Money Market, Total
Return, High Yield, Equity and Government Securities Subaccounts is compared to,
and the International Subaccount may be compared to, that index. The High Yield
and Government Securities Subaccounts are compared to the Lehman Brothers
Government and Corporate Bond Index, the Salomon Brothers High Grade Corporate
Bond Index and the Merrill Lynch Government/Corporate Master Index because such
indices are generally considered to represent the performance of intermediate
and long term bonds during various market cycles. The Money Market Subaccount is
also compared to the CDA Certificate of Deposit Index because certificates of
deposit represent an alternative current income producing product. The
International Subaccount may be compared to the CDA Mutual Fund--International
Index because the index is a weighted performance average of other mutual funds
that invest primarily in securities of foreign issuers. The International
Subaccount also may be compared to the Morgan Stanley Capital International
Europe Australia Far East Index because the index is an unmanaged index that is
considered to be generally representative of major non-United States stock
markets. Please note the differences and similarities between the investments
which a Subaccount may purchase and the investments measured by the indexes
which are described below. In particular, it should be noted that certificates
of deposit may offer fixed or variable yields and principal is guaranteed and
may be insured. The units of the Subaccounts are not insured. Also, the value of
the Subaccounts will fluctuate.
 
                                       B-3
<PAGE>   65
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                          VALUES OF INITIAL $10,000 INVESTMENT IN
                                            SUBACCOUNTS--AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1994
                                     --------------------------------------------------                 COMPARED TO
                                                                  Non-          Non-      ---------------------------------------
                                     Qualified    Qualified     Qualified    Qualified    Dow Jones   Standard   Consumer
                                      Ending      Percentage     Ending      Percentage   Industrial  & Poor's    Price     EAFE
        TOTAL RETURN TABLE             Value       Increase       Value       Increase    Average(1)   500(2)    Index(3)   (13)
----------------------------------   ---------    ----------    ---------    ----------   ---------   --------   --------   -----
<S>                                  <C>          <C>           <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>
EQUITY SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(4)...........    $32,261       222.61%      $32,215       222.15%      351.28%    304.56%     47.95%
  Ten years.......................     28,648       186.48        28,649       186.49       349.67     282.68      42.14
  Five years......................     17,056        70.56        17,056        70.56        63.05      51.60      18.72
  One year........................      9,450        (5.50)        9,450        (5.50)        5.02       1.31       2.67
TOTAL RETURN SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(5)...........    $36,253       262.53%      $33,758       237.58%      664.33%    553.57%     58.41%
  Ten years.......................     26,912       169.12        26,912       169.12       349.67     282.68      42.14
  Five years......................     13,893        38.93        13,893        38.93        63.05      51.60      18.72
  One year........................      8,903       (10.97)        8,903       (10.97)        5.02       1.31       2.67
INTERNATIONAL SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount (14).........    $12,187        21.87%      $12,187        21.87%       31.94%     19.99%      8.56%   26.64%
  One year........................      9,499        (5.01)        9,499        (5.01)        5.02       1.31       2.67     8.06
SMALL CAP SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(15)..........    $10,296         2.96%      $10,296         2.96%
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                            COMPARED TO
                   VALUES OF INITIAL $10,000 INVESTMENT IN         --------------------------------------------------------------
                     SUBACCOUNTS--AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1994                                   Salomon
              --------------------------------------------------                             Bros.        Lehman        Merrill
                                           Non-          Non-                              High Grade      Bros.         Lynch
    TOTAL      Qualified    Qualified     Qualified    Qualified    Consumer   CDA Cert.      Corp.      Govt./Corp.   Govt./Corp.
   RETURN       Ending      Percentage     Ending      Percentage    Price     of Deposit      Bond         Bond         Master
   TABLE        Value       Increase       Value       Increase    Index(3)    Index(6)     Index(7)     Index(8)      Index(9)
-----------   ---------    ----------    ---------    ----------   --------   ----------   ----------   -----------   -----------
<S>            <C>         <C>           <C>          <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>          <C>           <C>
MONEY
 MARKET
 SUBACCOUNT
  Life of
    Subaccount
     (10)....  $20,157       101.57%      $20,157       101.57%      58.41%     153.99%      404.53%       301.86%       302.39%
  Ten
   years.....   15,924        59.24        15,924        59.24       42.14       90.66       198.97        155.53        157.17
  Five
   years.....   11,785        17.85        11,785        17.85       18.72       29.69        49.43         44.93         45.45
  One
    year.....   10,230         2.30        10,230         2.30        2.67        5.05        (5.74)        (3.51)        (3.27)
HIGH YIELD
 SUBACCOUNT
  Life of
   Subaccount
      (11)...  $41,931       319.31%      $40,843       308.43%      58.41%     153.99%      404.53%       301.86%       302.39%
  Ten
   years.....   26,895        168.95       26,895       168.95       42.14       90.66       198.97        155.53        157.17
  Five
   years.....   16,523         65.23       16,523        65.23       18.72       29.69        49.43         44.93         45.45
  One
    year.....    9,625         (3.75)       9,625        (3.75)       2.67        5.05        (5.74)        (3.51)        (3.27)
GOVERNMENT 
  SECURITIES
  SUBACCOUNT
  Life of
    Subaccount
      (12)...  $14,925         49.25%     $14,925        49.25%      30.86%      57.55%      100.07%        84.45%        85.30%
  Five
   years.....   12,941         29.41       12,941        29.41       18.72       29.69        49.43         44.93         45.45
  One
    year.....    9,578         (4.22)       9,578        (4.22)       2.67        5.05        (5.74)        (3.51)        (3.27)
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                  Average Annual
                                                                   Total Return                      COMPARED TO
                                                                 (based on $1,000      ----------------------------------------
                                                                    investment)                     Standard
                                                               ---------------------   Dow Jones    & Poor's    Consumer
                    AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL                                     Non-      Industrial   500 Stock    Price     EAFE
                        RETURN TABLE                           Qualified   Qualified   Average(1)   Index(2)    Index(3)   (13)
-------------------------------------------------------------  ---------   ---------   ----------   ---------   --------   ----
<S>                                                            <C>         <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>
EQUITY SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(4)......................................     10.85%      10.83%      14.56%      13.44%      3.60%
  Ten years..................................................     10.69       10.69       16.22       14.36       3.58
  Five years.................................................      9.89        9.89       10.27        8.68       3.49
  One year...................................................    (12.73)     (12.73)       5.02        1.31       2.67
TOTAL RETURN SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(5)......................................      9.97%       9.31%      17.29%      15.86%      3.67%
  Ten years..................................................      9.45        9.45       16.22       14.36       3.58
  Five years.................................................      4.70        4.70       10.27        8.68       3.49
  One year...................................................    (18.45)     (18.45)       5.02        1.31       2.67
INTERNATIONAL SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount (14)....................................      4.31%       4.31%       9.68%       6.26%      2.77%    8.19%
  One year...................................................    (11.76)     (11.76)       5.02        1.31       2.67     8.06
</TABLE>
 
                                       B-4
<PAGE>   66
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             COMPARED TO
                                          AVERAGE ANNUAL             ------------------------------------------------------------
                                           TOTAL RETURN                                               LEHMAN
                                         (BASED ON $1,000                         SALOMON BROS.        BROS.        MERRILL LYNCH
                                            INVESTMENT)              CONSUMER      HIGH GRADE       GOVT./CORP.      GOVT./CORP.
      AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL         -----------------------------      PRICE        CORP. BOND          BOND            MASTER
          RETURN TABLE             QUALIFIED       NON-QUALIFIED     INDEX(3)       INDEX(7)         INDEX(8)         INDEX(9)
---------------------------------  ---------       -------------     --------     -------------     -----------     -------------
<S>                                <C>             <C>               <C>          <C>               <C>             <C>
HIGH YIELD SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(11).........     11.60%            11.36%         3.67           13.53            11.53            11.54
  Ten years......................      9.84              9.84          3.58           11.57             9.84             9.91
  Five years.....................      8.94              8.94          3.49            8.36             7.70             7.78
  One year.......................    (11.04)           (11.04)         2.67           (5.74)           (3.51)           (3.27)
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(12).........      5.02%             5.02%         3.74            9.92             8.71             8.77
  Five years.....................      3.91              3.91          3.49            8.36             7.70             7.78
  One year.......................    (11.34)           (11.34)         2.67           (5.74)           (3.51)           (3.27)
SMALL CAP SUBACCOUNT
  Life of Subaccount(15).........     (5.09)            (5.09)
 
<CAPTION>
        YIELD INFORMATION           QUALIFIED AND NON-QUALIFIED
   ---------------------------     -----------------------------
<S>                                       <C>            
HIGH YIELD SUBACCOUNT
  30 day period ended 3/31/95....           9.20%

GOVERNMENT SECURITIES SUBACCOUNT
  30 day period ended 3/31/95....           4.97%

MONEY MARKET SUBACCOUNT
  7 day period ended 3/31/95.....           4.26%
</TABLE>
 
(1) The Dow Jones Industrial Average is an unmanaged unweighted average of
thirty blue chip industrial corporations listed on the New York Stock Exchange.
Assumes reinvestment of dividends.
 
(2) The Standard & Poor's 500 Stock Index is an unmanaged weighted average of
500 stocks, over 95% of which are listed on the New York Stock Exchange. Assumes
reinvestment of dividends.
 
(3) The Consumer Price Index, published by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
is a statistical measure of change, over time, in the prices of goods and
services in major expenditure groups.
 
(4) From December 9, 1983 to December 31, 1994.
 
(5) From March 5, 1982 to December 31, 1994.
 
(6) The CDA Certificate of Deposit Index is provided by CDA Investment
Technologies, Inc., Silver Spring, Maryland, and is based upon a statistical
sampling of the yield of 30-day certificates of deposit of major commercial
banks. Yield is based upon a monthly compounding of interest.
 
(7) The Salomon Brothers High Grade Corporate Bond Index is on a total return
basis with all dividends reinvested and is comprised of high grade long-term
industrial and utility bonds rated in the top two rating categories.
 
(8) The Lehman Brothers Government/Corporate Bond Index is on a total return
basis and is comprised of all publicly issued, non-convertible, domestic debt of
the U.S. Government or any agency thereof, quasi-Federal corporation, or
corporate debt guaranteed by the U.S. Government and all publicly issued,
fixed-rate, non-convertible, domestic debt of the three major corporate
classifications: industrial, utility, and financial. Only notes and bonds with a
minimum outstanding principal amount of $1,000,000 and a minimum of one year are
included. Bonds included must have a rating of at least Baa by Moody's Investors
Service, BBB by Standard & Poor's Corporation or in the case of bank bonds not
rated by either Moody's or Standard & Poor's, BBB by Fitch Investors Service.
 
(9) The Merrill Lynch Government/Corporate Master Index is based upon the total
return with all dividends reinvested of 4,000 corporate and 300 government bonds
issued with an intermediate average maturity and an average quality rating of Aa
(Moody's Investors Service, Inc.) /AA (Standard & Poor's Corporation).
 
(10) From March 5, 1982 to December 31, 1994.
 
(11) From March 5, 1982 to December 31, 1994.
 
(12) From September 3, 1987 to December 31, 1994.
 
(13) EAFE is the Morgan Stanley Capital International Europe, Australia, Far
East index. This index is an unmanaged index that is considered to be generally
representative of major non-United States stock markets.
 
(14) From January 6, 1992 to December 31, 1994.
 
(15) From May 2, 1994 to December 31, 1994.
 
                                       B-5
<PAGE>   67
 
The following tables illustrate an assumed $10,000 investment in shares of
certain Subaccounts. The ending value does not include the effect of the
applicable Withdrawal Charge that may be imposed at the end of the period, and
thus may be higher than if such charge were deducted. Each table covers the
period from commencement of operations of the Subaccount to December 31, 1994.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
               TOTAL RETURN SUBACCOUNT
 
                                              NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED    QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL        TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE        VALUE
  -----                        --------     --------
   <S>                         <C>          <C>
   1982  ....................  $ 12,336     $ 11,769
   1983  ....................    14,313       13,211
   1984  ....................    13,427       12,508
   1985  ....................    17,019       15,853
   1986  ....................    19,328       18,003
   1987  ....................    19,188       17,872
   1988  ....................    21,207       19,752
   1989  ....................    25,945       24,164
   1990  ....................    26,889       25,043
   1991  ....................    36,583       34,069
   1992  ....................    36,703       34,179
   1993  ....................    40,598       37,805
   1994  ....................    36,253       33,758

<CAPTION>

                HIGH YIELD SUBACCOUNT
                                              NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED    QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL        TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE        VALUE
  -----                        --------     --------
   <S>                         <C>         <C>
   1982  ....................  $ 12,363     $ 11,920
   1983  ....................    14,000       13,427
   1984  ....................    15,557       15,155
   1985  ....................    18,686       18,203
   1986  ....................    21,710       21,149
   1987  ....................    22,693       22,105
   1988  ....................    25,944       25,273
   1989  ....................    25,278       24,624
   1990  ....................    21,092       20,546
   1991  ....................    31,597       30,778
   1992  ....................    36,712       35,760
   1993  ....................    43,466       42,338
   1994  ....................    41,931       40,843

<CAPTION>
               INTERNATIONAL SUBACCOUNT

                               QUALIFIED
                               AND NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE
  -----                        --------
   <S>                        <C>
   1992  ....................  $  9,803
   1993  ....................    12,836
   1994  ....................    12,187

<CAPTION>
                 SMALL CAP SUBACCOUNT

                               QUALIFIED
                               AND NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE
  -----                        --------
   <S>                        <C>
   1994  ....................  $ 10,296

<CAPTION>
                  EQUITY SUBACCOUNT
                                              NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED    QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL        TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE        VALUE
  -----                        --------     --------
   <S>                        <C>          <C>
   1983  ....................  $ 10,290     $ 10,271
   1984  ....................    11,254       11,237
   1985  ....................    13,898       13,877
   1986  ....................    14,986       14,965
   1987  ....................    15,043       15,022
   1988  ....................    14,908       14,887
   1989  ....................    18,871       18,844
   1990  ....................    18,736       18,709
   1991  ....................    29,479       29,437
   1992  ....................    30,123       30,080
   1993  ....................    34,063       34,011
   1994  ....................    32,261       32,215

<CAPTION>
               MONEY MARKET SUBACCOUNT

                               QUALIFIED
                               AND NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE
  -----                        --------
  <S>                         <C>
   1982  ....................  $ 10,747
   1983  ....................    11,575
   1984  ....................    12,630
   1985  ....................    13,479
   1986  ....................    14,185
   1987  ....................    14,922
   1988  ....................    15,827
   1989  ....................    17,045
   1990  ....................    18,195
   1991  ....................    19,003
   1992  ....................    19,385
   1993  ....................    19,661
   1994  ....................    20,157

<CAPTION>
           GOVERNMENT SECURITIES SUBACCOUNT

                               QUALIFIED
                               AND NON-
  YEAR                         QUALIFIED
  ENDED                          TOTAL
  12/31                          VALUE
  -----                        --------
   <S>                        <C>
   1987  ....................  $ 10,030
   1988  ....................    10,232
   1989  ....................    11,437
   1990  ....................    12,396
   1991  ....................    14,084
   1992  ....................    14,708
   1993  ....................    15,559
   1994  ....................    14,925
</TABLE>
 
The following table compares the performance of the Subaccounts over various
periods with that of other variable annuity funds within the categories
described below according to data reported by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.
("Lipper"), New York, New York, mutual fund reporting service. Lipper rankings
are based on changes in net asset value, with all income and capital gain
dividends reinvested. Such calculations do not include the effect of any sales
 
                                       B-6
<PAGE>   68
 
charges and include the deduction of mortality and expense risk charges and
other asset based charges. Future performance cannot be guaranteed. Lipper
publishes performance analyses on a regular basis from which the following
rankings were derived.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   LIPPER VARIABLE ANNUITY
                                                                                    PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS
                                                                            -------------------------------------
                                                                                2/28/94               2/28/89
                                                                                  TO                    TO
            SUBACCOUNT                                                          2/28/95               2/28/95
            ----------                                                       ---------------        --------------
            <S>                                                             <C>                    <C>
            Total Return (Q)..............................................    113 out of 117         17 out of 52
            Total Return (NQ).............................................    112 out of 117         18 out of 52
            High Yield (Q)................................................     20 out of 60          21 out of 39
            High Yield (NQ)...............................................     21 out of 60          20 out of 39
            Equity (Q)....................................................     43 out of 84           7 out of 36
            Equity (NQ)...................................................     43 out of 84           8 out of 36
            Money Market (Q)..............................................     80 out of 169         59 out of 106
            Money Market (NQ).............................................     80 out of 169         59 out of 106
            Government Securities (Q & NQ)................................      8 out of 12             N/A
            International (Q & NQ)........................................     42 out of 48             N/A
</TABLE>
 
The Total Return Subaccount, High Yield Subaccount, Equity Subaccount, Money
Market Subaccount, International Subaccount and Government Securities Subaccount
are ranked by Lipper in the Flexible Portfolio, High Current Yield, Capital
Appreciation, Money Market, International and U.S. Mortgage and GNMA Government
Securities categories, respectively. Variable annuity funds in these categories
have a variety of objectives, policies and market and credit risks that should
be considered in reviewing the rankings. The performance of the Subaccount may
also be compared to other variable annuity funds ranked by Morningstar, Inc. or
VARDS Inc.
 
TAX-DEFERRED ACCUMULATION
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                 TAX-DEFERRED                     NON-QUALIFIED               CONVENTIONAL
                              RETIREMENT ANNUITY                     ANNUITY                  SAVINGS PLAN
                                                                                               
                           BEFORE-TAX CONTRIBUTIONS          AFTER-TAX CONTRIBUTIONS            
                          AND TAX-DEFERRED EARNINGS.        AND TAX-DEFERRED EARNINGS.
                          --------------------------        --------------------------        AFTER-TAX
                                            TAXABLE                           TAXABLE        CONTRIBUTIONS
                                             LUMP                              LUMP               AND
                              NO             SUM                NO             SUM              TAXABLE
                          WITHDRAWALS      WITHDRAWAL       WITHDRAWALS      WITHDRAWAL         EARNINGS.
                          ---------        ---------        ---------        ---------        -----------
<S>                       <C>              <C>              <C>              <C>              <C>
10 Years................  $  33,898        $  22,732        $  23,283        $  20,746        $  22,137
20 Years................    100,018           66,967           68,698           56,258           60,535
30 Years................    228,992          151,140          157,284          119,479          127,136
</TABLE>
 
This chart compares the accumulation of monthly contributions into a
Tax-Deferred Retirement Annuity through a payroll reduction program, a
Non-qualified Annuity and a Conventional Savings Plan. Before-tax contributions
to the Tax-Deferred Retirement Annuity are $200 per month and the entire amount
of a taxable lump sum withdrawal will be subject to income tax. After-tax
contributions to the Non-qualified Annuity and the Conventional Savings Plan are
$138 per month. Only the gain in the Non-qualified Annuity will be subject to
income tax in a taxable lump sum withdrawal. The chart assumes a 31% tax bracket
and an 8% annual return. Tax rates are subject to change as is the tax-deferred
treatment of the Contracts. Tax-deferred retirement accumulations, as well as
the income on non-qualified annuities, are taxed as ordinary income upon
withdrawal. A 10% tax penalty may apply to early withdrawals. See "Federal
Income Taxes" in the prospectus. For the Tax-Deferred Retirement Annuity and the
Non-Qualified Annuity the figures include a deduction for all applicable
Contract charges. No implication is intended by the use of these assumptions
that the return shown is guaranteed in any way or that the return shown
represents an average or expected rate of return over the period of the
Contracts. [IMPORTANT--THIS IS NOT AN ILLUSTRATION OF YIELD OR RETURN]
 
Unlike savings plans, contributions to tax-deferred retirement annuities and
non-qualified annuities provide tax-deferred treatment on earnings. In addition,
contributions to tax-deferred retirement annuities are not subject to current
tax in the year of contribution. When monies are received from a tax-deferred
retirement annuity or non-qualified annuity (and you have many different options
on how you receive your funds), they are subject to income
 
                                       B-7
<PAGE>   69
 
tax. At the time of receipt, if the person receiving the monies is retired, not
working or has additional tax exemptions, these monies may be taxed at a lesser
rate.
 
                                STATE REGULATION
 
KILICO is subject to the laws of Illinois governing insurance companies and to
regulation by the Illinois Department of Insurance. An annual statement in a
prescribed form is filed with the Illinois Department of Insurance each year.
KILICO's books and accounts are subject to review by the Department of Insurance
at all times, and a full examination of its operations is conducted
periodically. Such regulation does not, however, involve any supervision of
management or investment practices or policies. In addition, KILICO is subject
to regulation under the insurance laws of other jurisdictions in which it may
operate.
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
The financial statements of KILICO and the Separate Account have been included
in the Statement of Additional Information in reliance upon the reports of KPMG
Peat Marwick LLP, independent certified public accountants, appearing elsewhere
herein, and upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and
auditing. As discussed in the notes to KILICO's consolidated financial
statements effective January 1, 1994, KILICO changed its method of accounting
for investment securities to adopt the provisions of the Financial Accounting
Standards Board's Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") 115,
ACCOUNTING FOR CERTAIN INVESTMENTS IN DEBTS AND EQUITY SECURITIES. Also, as
discussed in the notes, effective January 1, 1993, KILICO changed its method of
accounting for impairment of loans receivable to adopt the provisions of SFAS
114, ACCOUNTING BY CREDITORS FOR IMPAIRMENT OF A LOAN, and changed its method of
accounting for income taxes to adopt the provisions of SFAS 109, ACCOUNTING FOR
INCOME TAXES. Further, as discussed in the notes, KILICO adopted the provisions
of SFAS 106, EMPLOYERS' ACCOUNTING FOR POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS OTHER THAN
PENSIONS in 1992.
 
                              FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
This Statement of Additional Information contains financial statements for the
Separate Account which reflect assets attributable to the Contracts and also
reflect assets attributable to other variable annuity contracts offered by
KILICO through the Separate Account.
 
                                       B-8
<PAGE>   70
 
                          INDEPENDENT AUDITORS' REPORT
 
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY:
 
We have audited the accompanying combined statement of assets and liabilities
and contract owners' equity of the KILICO Variable Annuity Separate Account as
of December 31, 1994, and the related combined statement of operations for the
year then ended, and the combined statements of changes in contract owners'
equity for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1993. These financial
statements are the responsibility of the Company's management. Our
responsibility is to express an opinion on these financial statements based on
our audits.
 
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the combined financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material respects, the combined financial position of the KILICO
Variable Annuity Separate Account as of December 31, 1994, and the combined
results of its operations for the year then ended, and the combined changes in
its contract owners' equity for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1993, in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.
 
                                         KPMG Peat Marwick LLP
 
Chicago, Illinois
February 13, 1995
 
                                       B-9
<PAGE>   71
 
KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
COMBINED STATEMENT OF ASSETS AND LIABILITIES AND CONTRACT OWNERS' EQUITY
 
DECEMBER 31, 1994 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                               MONEY                                                 
                                                   MONEY      MARKET       TOTAL       HIGH                  GOVERNMENT  
                                                  MARKET       SUB-        RETURN      YIELD       EQUITY    SECURITIES   
                                                    SUB-     ACCOUNT        SUB-        SUB-        SUB-        SUB-      
                                      COMBINED    ACCOUNT      #2         ACCOUNT    ACCOUNT     ACCOUNT     ACCOUNT    
                                      --------    --------   -------      -------    -------     -------     --------  
<S>                                 <C>           <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>      
ASSETS                              
  Investments,
    at current value..........       $1,432,488    78,837      3,676       584,469    217,698     320,586     91,604   
  Dividends and other
    receivables...............              301       216          9            23         10          21          4   
                                     ----------    ------      -----       -------    -------     -------     ------   
     Total assets.............        1,432,789    79,053      3,685       584,492    217,708     320,607     91,608   
                                     ----------    ------      -----       -------    -------     -------     ------   
LIABILITIES AND CONTRACT
OWNERS' EQUITY
  Liabilities:
    Mortality and expense risk 
    and administrative 
    charges...................            1,525        99         --           627        220         337         99   
    Other.....................              110         4         --            --         --          --         --   
                                     ----------    ------      -----       -------    -------     -------     ------   
       Total liabilities......            1,635       103         --           627        220         337         99   
                                     ----------    ------      -----       -------    -------     -------     ------   
  Contract owners' equity.....       $1,431,154    78,950      3,685       583,865    217,488     320,270     91,509   
                                     ==========    ======      =====       =======    =======     =======     ======   
ANALYSIS OF CONTRACT
OWNERS' EQUITY
 Excess of proceeds
    from units sold over
    payments for units
    redeemed..................       $  971,895    17,494      3,265       394,080    103,120     243,967     79,529   
 Accumulated
    net investment
    income (loss).............          378,073    61,456        420       159,772    122,056      19,327     16,110   
 Accumulated
    net realized
    gain (loss) on sales of
    investments...............           72,532       --          --        44,173     (4,720)     29,760      1,041   
 Unrealized
    appreciation
    (depreciation)
    of investments............            8,654       --          --       (14,160)    (2,968)     27,216     (5,171)  
                                     ----------    ------      -----       -------    -------     -------     ------   
 Contract owners'
    equity....................       $1,431,154    78,950      3,685       583,865    217,488     320,270     91,509   
                                     ==========    ======      =====       =======    =======     =======     ======   


                 
<CAPTION>        
                                                       SMALL
                                          INTER-    CAPITALIZATION
                                         NATIONAL      EQUITY
                                           SUB-         SUB-
                                         ACCOUNT      ACCOUNT
                                         -------    -------------
<S>                                     <C>        <C>
ASSETS           
  Investments, at current   
    value.....................           122,709        12,909
  Dividends and other    
    receivables...............                 6            12
                                         -------        ------
     Total assets.............           122,715        12,921
                                         -------        ------
LIABILITIES AND CONTRACT     
OWNERS' EQUITY           
  Liabilities:   
    Mortality and expense  
      risk and administrative      
      charges.................               131            12
  Other.......................                --           106
                                         -------        ------
     Total liabilities........               131           118
                                         -------        ------
  Contract owners' equity.....           122,584        12,803
                                         =======        ====== 
ANALYSIS OF CONTRACT
OWNERS' EQUITY
 Excess of proceeds
    from units sold over
    payments for units      
    redeemed..................           117,687        12,753
 Accumulated net investment 
    income (loss).............              (907)         (161)
 Accumulated       
    net realized gain (loss)    
    on sales of investments...             2,355           (77)
 Unrealized appreciation    
   (depreciation) of 
    investments...............             3,449           288
                                         -------        ------
 Contract owners' equity......           122,584        12,803
                                         =======        ======

</TABLE> 

 
See accompanying notes to combined financial statements.
 
                                      B-10
<PAGE>   72
 
KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
COMBINED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
FOR THE YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 (IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                               
                                                                                               
                                                        MONEY         MONEY         TOTAL                
                                                        MARKET        MARKET        RETURN       HIGH YIELD 
                                           COMBINED   SUBACCOUNT  SUBACCOUNT #2   SUBACCOUNT     SUBACCOUNT 
                                           ---------  ----------  --------------  ----------     ---------- 
<S>                                        <C>        <C>         <C>             <C>            <C>        
Dividends and                                                                                  
  capital gains                                                                                
  distributions................           $ 105,315     3,840           153          58,451         19,146   
                                                                                               
Expenses:                                                                                      
                                                                                               
  Mortality and expense                                                                        
    risk and administrative                                                                    
    charges....................              20,153     1,266             1           8,636          2,988   
                                          ---------     -----           ---        --------       --------  
                                                                                               
Net investment income (loss)...              85,162     2,574           152          49,815         16,158  
                                          ---------     -----           ---        --------       -------- 
                                                                                               
Net realized and unrealized gain                                                               
  (loss) on investments:                                                                       
                                                                                               
  Net realized gain (loss) on                                                                  
    sales of investments.......              11,105        --            --             878          3,164   
                                                                                               
  Change in unrealized                                                                         
    appreciation (depreciation)                                                                
    of investments.............            (199,366)       --            --        (121,752)       (27,264)  
                                          ---------     -----           ---        --------       --------
                                                                                               
Net realized and unrealized gain                                                               
  (loss) on investments........            (188,261)       --            --        (120,874)       (24,100) 
                                          ---------     -----           ---        --------       --------
                                                                                               
Net increase (decrease) in                                                                     
  contract owners' equity                                                                      
  resulting from                                                                               
  operations...................           $(103,099)    2,574           152         (71,059)        (7,942)   
                                          =========     =====           ===        ========       ======== 
</TABLE>

(a) For the period from May 2, 1994 (commencement of operations) to December 31,
    1994.
 
See accompanying notes to combined financial statements.

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 SMALL
                                                  GOVERNMENT                 CAPITALIZATION
                                        EQUITY    SECURITIES  INTERNATIONAL      EQUITY
                                      SUBACCOUNT  SUBACCOUNT   SUBACCOUNT    SUBACCOUNT(a)
                                      ----------  ----------  -------------  --------------
<S>                                   <C>         <C>         <C>            <C>
Dividends and                  
  capital gains                
  distributions................         14,860       7,695        1,170            --
                               
Expenses:                      
                               
  Mortality and expense        
    risk and administrative    
    charges....................          4,137       1,379        1,585           161
                                       -------     -------       ------         -----
                               
Net investment income (loss)...         10,723       6,316         (415)         (161)
                                       -------     -------       ------         -----
                               
Net realized and unrealized gain
  (loss) on investments:       
                               
  Net realized gain (loss) on  
    sales of investments.......          5,853        (726)       2,013           (77)
                               
  Change in unrealized         
    appreciation (depreciation)
    of investments.............        (32,435)    (10,070)      (8,133)          288
                                       -------     -------       ------         -----
                               
Net realized and unrealized gain
  (loss) on investments........        (26,582)    (10,796)      (6,120)          211
                                       -------     -------       ------         -----
                               
Net increase (decrease) in     
  contract owners' equity      
  resulting from               
  operations...................        (15,859)     (4,480)      (6,535)           50
                                       =======     =======       ======         ===== 
</TABLE>
 
(a) For the period from May 2, 1994 (commencement of operations) to December 31,
    1994.
 
See accompanying notes to combined financial statements.
 
                                      B-11
<PAGE>   73
 
KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
COMBINED STATEMENTS OF CHANGES IN CONTRACT OWNERS' EQUITY
 
FOR THE YEARS ENDED DECEMBER 31, 1994 AND 1993
(IN THOUSANDS)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 MONEY MARKET                   MONEY MARKET
                                                 COMBINED                         SUBACCOUNT                    SUBACCOUNT #2
                                       ----------------------------         -----------------------         ---------------------
                                          1994              1993             1994            1993            1994           1993
                                       ----------         ---------         -------         -------         ------         ------
<S>                                    <C>                <C>               <C>             <C>             <C>            <C>
Operations:
  Net investment income (loss).......  $   85,162            49,841           2,574             997            152            127
  Net realized gain (loss) on sales
    of investments...................      11,105            19,074              --              --             --             --
  Change in unrealized appreciation
    (depreciation) of investments....    (199,366)           72,722              --              --             --             --
                                       ----------         ---------         -------         -------         ------         ------
    Net increase (decrease) in
      contract owners' equity
      resulting from operations......    (103,099)          141,637           2,574             997            152            127
                                       ----------         ---------         -------         -------         ------         ------
Account unit transactions:
  Proceeds from units sold...........     254,411           266,721          19,971          12,800          6,673          4,794
  Net transfers (to) from affiliate
    and subaccounts..................       3,471            48,524          16,310          (2,660)        (6,297)        (8,394)
  Payments for units redeemed........    (152,336)         (104,210)        (24,064)        (13,103)           (68)           (84)
                                       ----------         ---------         -------         -------         ------         ------
    Net increase (decrease) in
      contract owners' equity from
      account unit transactions......     105,546           211,035          12,217          (2,963)           308         (3,684)
                                       ----------         ---------         -------         -------         ------         ------
Total increase (decrease) in contract
  owners' equity.....................       2,447           352,672          14,791          (1,966)           460         (3,557)
Contract owners' equity:
  Beginning of period................   1,428,707         1,076,035          64,159          66,125          3,225          6,782
                                       ----------         ---------         -------         -------         ------         ------
  End of period......................  $1,431,154         1,428,707          78,950          64,159          3,685          3,225
                                       ==========         =========         =======         =======         ======         ======
</TABLE>
 
(a) For the period from May 2, 1994 (commencement of operations) to December 31,
    1994.
 
See accompanying notes to combined financial statements.
 
                                      B-12
<PAGE>   74
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                     
                                                                                                                        SMALL
                                                                          GOVERNMENT                                CAPITALIZATION
    TOTAL RETURN            HIGH YIELD               EQUITY               SECURITIES           INTERNATIONAL            EQUITY
     SUBACCOUNT             SUBACCOUNT             SUBACCOUNT             SUBACCOUNT             SUBACCOUNT           SUBACCOUNT
--------------------    -------------------    -------------------    -------------------    ------------------     ---------------
  1994        1993       1994        1993       1994        1993       1994        1993       1994        1993      1994(a)    1993
--------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     ------     -------   ------
<S>          <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>             

  49,815      28,972     16,158      11,854     10,723       2,502      6,316       5,694       (415)      (305)      (161)       --

     878       6,051      3,164       2,654      5,853       9,420       (726)        632      2,013        317        (77)       --

(121,752)     23,970    (27,264)     19,150    (32,435)     18,912    (10,070)     (1,182)    (8,133)    11,872        288        --
--------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     ------     -------   ------


 (71,059)     58,993     (7,942)     33,658    (15,859)     30,834     (4,480)      5,144     (6,535)    11,884         50        --
--------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     ------     -------   ------

  89,169     104,977     34,261      39,600     52,913      56,537     15,214      32,889     32,734     15,124      3,476        --

 (16,297)     (5,727)   (15,720)     15,978     25,150       9,542    (24,188)     (4,289)    15,006     44,074      9,507        --
 (58,032)    (43,640)   (24,877)    (18,723)   (24,735)    (16,241    (12,918)    (10,666)    (7,412)    (1,753)      (230)       --
--------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     ------     -------   ------


  14,840      55,610     (6,336)     36,855     53,328      49,838    (21,892)     17,934     40,328     57,445     12,753        --
--------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     ------     -------   ------

 (56,219)    114,603    (14,278)     70,513     37,469      80,672    (26,372)     23,078     33,793     69,329     12,803        --

 640,084     525,481    231,766     161,253    282,801     202,129    117,881      94,803     88,791     19,462         --        --
--------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     -------    -------     ------     -------   ------
 583,865     640,084    217,488     231,766    320,270     282,801     91,509     117,881    122,584     88,791     12,803        --
========     =======    =======     =======    =======     =======    =======     =======    =======     ======     ========  ======
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-13
<PAGE>   75
 
KILICO VARIABLE ANNUITY SEPARATE ACCOUNT
 
NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(1) GENERAL INFORMATION AND SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
ORGANIZATION.
 
KILICO Variable Annuity Separate Account (the "Separate Account") is a unit
investment trust registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as
amended, established by Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company ("KILICO"). The
Separate Account is used to fund contracts or certificates (collectively
referred to as "contracts") for ADVANTAGE III periodic and flexible payment
variable annuity contracts and PASSPORT individual and group variable and market
value adjusted deferred annuity contracts. The Separate Account is divided into
eight Subaccounts and each Subaccount invests exclusively in a corresponding
Portfolio of the Kemper Investors Fund (the "Fund"), an open-end diversified
management investment company.
 
SECURITY VALUATION.
 
The investments are stated at current value which is based on the closing bid
price, net asset value, at December 31, 1994.
 
SECURITY TRANSACTIONS AND INVESTMENT INCOME.
 
Security transactions are accounted for on the trade date (date the order to buy
or sell is executed). Dividends and capital gains distributions are recorded as
income on the ex-dividend date. Realized gains and losses from security
transactions are reported on an identified cost basis.
 
ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUATION.
 
On each day the New York Stock Exchange (the "Exchange") is open for trading,
the accumulation unit value is determined as of the earlier of 3:00 p.m.
(Chicago time) or the close of the Exchange by dividing the total value of each
Subaccount's investments and other assets, less liabilities, by the number of
accumulation units outstanding in the respective Subaccount.
 
FEDERAL INCOME TAXES.
 
The operations of the Separate Account are included in the Federal income tax
return of KILICO. Under existing Federal income tax law, investment income and
realized capital gains and losses of the Separate Account increase liabilities
under the contract and are, therefore, not taxed. Thus the Separate Account may
realize net investment income and capital gains and losses without Federal
income tax consequences.
 
(2) SUMMARY OF INVESTMENTS
 
Investments, at cost, at December 31, 1994, are as follows (in thousands):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   Shares
                                                                                                   Owned            Cost
                                                                                                  --------       ----------
<S>                                                                                               <C>            <C>
  INVESTMENTS
  Kemper Investors Fund Money Market Portfolio (Money Market and
    Money Market #2 Subaccounts)................................................................    82,513       $   82,513
  Kemper Investors Fund Total Return Portfolio..................................................   276,685          598,629
  Kemper Investors Fund High Yield Portfolio....................................................   183,754          220,666
  Kemper Investors Fund Equity Portfolio........................................................   120,300          293,370
  Kemper Investors Fund Government Securities Portfolio.........................................    80,232           96,775
  Kemper Investors Fund International Portfolio.................................................    98,620          119,260
  Kemper Investors Fund Small Capitalization Equity Portfolio...................................    12,420           12,621
                                                                                                                 ----------
        TOTAL INVESTMENTS.......................................................................                 $1,423,834
                                                                                                                 ==========
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-14
<PAGE>   76
 
NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
 
The underlying investments and significant industry concentrations of the Fund's
portfolios are summarized below.
 
MONEY MARKET PORTFOLIO:  This Portfolio invests primarily in short-term
obligations of major banks and corporations. The Money Market Subaccount
represents the ADVANTAGE III Money Market Subaccount and the PASSPORT Money
Market Subaccount #1. Money Market Subaccount #2 represents funds allocated by
the owner of a contract to the dollar cost averaging program. Under the dollar
cost averaging program, an owner may predesignate a portion of the Subaccount
value to be automatically transferred on a monthly basis to one or more of the
other Subaccounts. This option is only available to PASSPORT individual and
group variable and market value adjusted deferred annuity contracts. At December
31, 1994, no industry exceeded 20% of the Portfolio's assets.
 
TOTAL RETURN PORTFOLIO: This Portfolio's investments will normally consist of
fixed-income and equity securities. Fixed-income securities will include bonds
and other debt securities and preferred stocks. Equity investments normally will
consist of common stocks and securities convertible into or exchangeable for
common stocks, however, the Portfolio may also make private placement
investments (which are normally restricted securities). At December 31, 1994, no
industry exceeded 20% of the Portfolio's assets.
 
HIGH YIELD PORTFOLIO: This Portfolio invests in fixed-income securities, a
substantial portion of which are high yielding fixed-income securities. These
securities ordinarily will be in the lower rating categories of recognized
rating agencies or will be non-rated, and generally will involve more risk than
securities in the higher rating categories. At December 31, 1994, 21.3% of the
Portfolio's assets were invested in the manufacturing, metals and mining
industry. No other industry exceeded 20% of the Portfolio's assets.
 
EQUITY PORTFOLIO: This Portfolio's investments normally will consist of common
stocks and securities convertible into or exchangeable for common stocks,
however, it may also make private placement investments (which are normally
restricted securities). At December 31, 1994, no industry exceeded 20% of the
Portfolio's assets.
 
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES PORTFOLIO: This Portfolio invests primarily in U.S.
Government securities. The Portfolio will also invest in fixed-income securities
other than U.S. Government securities and will engage in options and financial
futures transactions. At December 31, 1994, the Portfolio had 89.6% of its
assets invested in U.S. Government obligations.
 
INTERNATIONAL PORTFOLIO: This Portfolio's investments will normally consist of
equity securities of non-United States issuers, however, it may also invest in
convertible and debt securities of non-United States issuers and foreign
currencies. At December 31, 1994, 32% of the Portfolio's assets were invested in
Japan. No other industry or country exceeded 20% of the Portfolio's assets.
 
SMALL CAPITALIZATION EQUITY PORTFOLIO: This Portfolio's investments will consist
primarily of common stocks and securities convertible into or exchangeable for
common stocks and to a limited degree in preferred stocks and debt securities.
At least 65% of the Portfolio's total assets will be invested in equity
securities of companies having a market capitalization of $1 billion or less at
the time of initial investment. At December 31, 1994 no industry exceeded 20% of
the Portfolio's assets.
 
(3) TRANSACTIONS WITH AFFILIATES
 
KILICO assumes mortality risks associated with the annuity contracts and incurs
all expenses involved in administering the contracts. In return, KILICO assesses
that portion of each Subaccount representing assets under the ADVANTAGE III
flexible payment contracts with a daily charge for mortality and expense risk
and administrative costs which amounts to an aggregate of one percent (1.00%)
per annum. KILICO also assesses that portion of each Subaccount representing
assets under the ADVANTAGE III periodic payment contracts with a daily asset
charge for mortality and expense risk and administrative costs which amounts to
an aggregate of one and three-tenths percent (1.30%) per annum. KILICO assesses
that portion of each Subaccount representing assets under PASSPORT individual
and group variable and market value adjusted deferred annuity contracts with a
daily asset charge for mortality and expense risk and administrative costs which
amounts to an aggregate of one and one-quarter percent (1.25%) per annum. The
PASSPORT DCA Money Market Subaccount #2, available for participation in the
dollar cost averaging program, has no daily asset charge deduction.
 
                                      B-15
<PAGE>   77
 
NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
 
KILICO also assesses against each ADVANTAGE III contract participating in one or
more of the Subaccounts at any time during the year a records maintenance
charge. For contracts purchased prior to June 1, 1993, the charge is $25 and is
assessed on December 31st of each calendar year. For contracts purchased June 1,
1993 and subsequent, the charge is $36 and is assessed ratably every quarter of
each calendar year, except in those states which have yet to approve these
contract changes. The charge is assessed whether or not any purchase payments
have been made during the year. KILICO also assesses against each PASSPORT
contract participating in one or more of the Subaccounts a records maintenance
charge of $30 at the end of each contract year.
 
For contracts issued prior to May 1, 1994, KILICO has undertaken to reimburse
each of the ADVANTAGE III Money Market, Total Return, High Yield, and Equity
Subaccounts whose direct and indirect operating expenses exceed eighty
hundredths of one percent (.80%) of average daily net assets. In determining
reimbursement of direct and indirect operating expenses, for each Subaccount,
charges for mortality and expense risks and administrative expenses, and records
maintenance charges are excluded and, for each Portfolio, charges for taxes,
extraordinary expenses, and brokerage and transaction costs are excluded. During
the year ended December 31, 1994, no such payment was made.
 
Proceeds payable on the redemption of units are reduced by the amount of any
applicable contingent deferred sales charge due to KILICO. During the year ended
December 31, 1994, KILICO received contingent deferred sales charges of
$1,568,200.
 
Kemper Financial Services, Inc., an affiliated company, is the investment
manager and principal underwriter of the Portfolios of the Fund which serve as
the underlying investments of the Separate Accounts.
 
(4) NET TRANSFERS (TO) FROM AFFILIATED DIVISIONS AND SUBACCOUNTS
 
Net transfers (to) from affiliated divisions or accounts include transfers of
all or part of the contract owner's interest to or from another Subaccount or to
the general account of KILICO.
 
(5) CONTRACT OWNERS' EQUITY
 
The contract owners' equity is affected by the investment results of each
Portfolio and contract charges. The accompanying financial statements include
only contract owners' payments pertaining to the variable portions of their
contracts and exclude any payments for the market value adjusted or fixed
portions, the latter being included in the general account of KILICO. Contract
owners may elect to annuitize the contract under one of several annuity options,
as specified in the prospectus.
 
                                      B-16
<PAGE>   78
 
NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
 
Contract owners' equity at December 31, 1994, is as follows (in thousands,
except unit value; differences are due to rounding):
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   NUMBER                          CONTRACT
                                                                                     OF             UNIT           OWNERS'
                                                                                   UNITS           VALUE            EQUITY
                                                                                  --------         ------         ----------
<S>                                                                               <C>              <C>            <C>
ADVANTAGE III SUBACCOUNT
MONEY MARKET
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................       733         $2.111         $    1,547
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................     6,914          2.111             14,596
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................    15,997          2.033             32,519
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................     7,343          2.033             14,926
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                      63,588
                                                                                                                  ----------
TOTAL RETURN
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................     1,299          3.796              4,932
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................     6,613          3.515             23,244
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................   110,428          3.656            403,681
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................    24,773          3.406             84,376
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                     516,233
                                                                                                                  ----------
HIGH YIELD
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................       532          4.372              2,324
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................     3,621          4.186             15,157
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................    26,546          4.210            111,758
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................    12,416          4.101             50,918
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                     180,157
                                                                                                                  ----------
EQUITY
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................       238          3.345                795
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................     1,370          3.334              4,568
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................    58,845          3.238            190,522
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................    19,776          3.233             63,935
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                     259,820
                                                                                                                  ----------
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................       237          1.337                317
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................     1,465          1.337              1,958
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................    24,332          1.317             32,039
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................    23,487          1.317             30,926
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                      65,240
                                                                                                                  ----------
INTERNATIONAL
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................       625          1.234                771
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................     2,450          1.234              3,024
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................    61,490          1.223             75,223
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................    14,546          1.223             17,795
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                      96,813
                                                                                                                  ----------
SMALL CAPITALIZATION EQUITY
  Flexible Payment, Qualified...................................................        14          1.033                 14
  Flexible Payment, Nonqualified................................................       227          1.033                234
  Periodic Payment, Qualified...................................................     8,304          1.031              8,558
  Periodic Payment, Nonqualified................................................     1,242          1.031              1,280
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total.......................................................................                                      10,086
                                                                                                                  ----------
TOTAL ADVANTAGE III CONTRACT OWNERS' EQUITY..............................................................         $1,191,937
                                                                                                                  ----------
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-17
<PAGE>   79
 
NOTES TO COMBINED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--(CONTINUED)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   NUMBER                          CONTRACT
                                                                                     OF             UNIT           OWNERS'
                                                                                   UNITS           VALUE            EQUITY
                                                                                  --------         ------         ----------
<S>                                                                               <C>              <C>            <C>
PASSPORT SUBACCOUNT

MONEY MARKET #1
  Qualified....................................................................      4,014         $1.065         $    4,275
  Nonqualified.................................................................     10,409          1.065             11,087
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                       15,362
                                                                                                                  ----------
MONEY MARKET #2
  Qualified....................................................................        858          1.105                949
  Nonqualified.................................................................      2,475          1.105              2,736
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                        3,685
                                                                                                                  ----------
TOTAL RETURN
  Qualified....................................................................     17,755          0.991             17,606
  Nonqualified.................................................................     50,452          0.991             50,026
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                       67,632
                                                                                                                  ----------
HIGH YIELD
  Qualified....................................................................      7,119          1.308              9,311
  Nonqualified.................................................................     21,426          1.308             28,020
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                       37,331
                                                                                                                  ----------
EQUITY
  Qualified....................................................................     16,003          1.093             17,491
  Nonqualified.................................................................     39,305          1.093             42,959
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                       60,450
                                                                                                                  ----------
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES
  Qualified....................................................................      5,654          1.061              5,999
  Nonqualified.................................................................     19,106          1.061             20,270
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                       26,269
                                                                                                                  ----------
INTERNATIONAL
  Qualified....................................................................      5,886          1.225              7,211
  Nonqualified.................................................................     15,149          1.225             18,560
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                       25,771
                                                                                                                  ----------
SMALL CAPITALIZATION EQUITY
  Qualified....................................................................        881          1.031                907
  Nonqualified.................................................................      1,756          1.031              1,810
                                                                                                                  ----------
    Total......................................................................                                        2,717
                                                                                                                  ----------
TOTAL PASSPORT CONTRACT OWNERS' EQUITY...................................................................            239,217
                                                                                                                  ----------
TOTAL CONTRACT OWNERS' EQUITY............................................................................         $1,431,154
                                                                                                                  ==========
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-18
<PAGE>   80
 
REPORT OF INDEPENDENT PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS
 
The Board of Directors
Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company:
 
We have audited the consolidated balance sheet of Kemper Investors Life
Insurance Company and subsidiaries as of December 31, 1994 and 1993, and the
related consolidated statements of operations, stockholder's equity and cash
flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 1994.
These consolidated financial statements are the responsibility of the Company's
management. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on these consolidated
financial statements based on our audits.
 
We conducted our audits in accordance with generally accepted auditing
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement. An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. An audit also includes
assessing the accounting principles used and significant estimates made by
management, as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.
 
In our opinion, the consolidated financial statements referred to above present
fairly, in all material respects, the financial position of Kemper Investors
Life Insurance Company and subsidiaries at December 31, 1994 and 1993, and the
results of their operations and their cash flows for each of the years in the
three-year period ended December 31, 1994, in conformity with generally accepted
accounting principles.
 
As discussed in the notes to the consolidated financial statements, effective
January 1, 1994, the Company changed its method of accounting for investment
securities to adopt the provisions of the Financial Accounting Standards Board's
Statement of Financial Accounting Standards ("SFAS") 115, ACCOUNTING FOR CERTAIN
INVESTMENTS IN DEBT AND EQUITY SECURITIES. Also, as discussed in the notes,
effective January 1, 1993, the Company changed its method of accounting for
impairment of loans receivable to adopt the provisions of SFAS 114, ACCOUNTING
BY CREDITORS FOR IMPAIRMENT OF A LOAN, and changed its method of accounting for
income taxes to adopt the provisions of SFAS 109, ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES.
Further, as discussed in the notes, the Company adopted the provisions of SFAS
106, EMPLOYERS' ACCOUNTING FOR POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS OTHER THAN PENSIONS in
1992.
 
                                            KPMG PEAT MARWICK LLP
Chicago, Illinois
March 3, 1995
 
                                      B-19
<PAGE>   81
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                           CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEET
                       (in thousands, except share data)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                              DECEMBER 31
                                                                      ---------------------------
                                                                         1994             1993
                                                                      ----------       ----------
<S>                                                                   <C>              <C>
ASSETS
Fixed maturities, available for sale, at market (cost: 1994,
  $3,707,356; 1993, $3,333,202).....................................  $3,463,732       $3,441,224
Equity securities, at market (cost: 1994, $14,947; 1993, $35,170)...      14,767           67,700
Short-term investments..............................................     204,164          402,463
Joint venture mortgage loans........................................     351,359          730,753
Third-party mortgage loans..........................................     318,682          132,162
Other real estate-related investments...............................     237,242          291,489
Policy loans........................................................     277,743          264,112
Other invested assets...............................................      25,760           43,267
                                                                      ----------       ----------
          Total investments.........................................   4,893,449        5,373,170
Cash................................................................      23,189            7,487
Accrued investment income...........................................     125,543          132,834
Deferred insurance acquisition costs................................     310,465          288,097
Fixed assets, at cost less accumulated depreciation.................       3,735            6,413
Receivable for securities sold......................................          --           26,631
Reinsurance recoverable.............................................     642,801          745,554
Other assets and receivables........................................      29,914           34,058
Assets held in separate accounts....................................   1,507,984        1,499,471
                                                                      ----------       ----------
          Total assets..............................................  $7,537,080       $8,113,715
                                                                      ==========       ==========
LIABILITIES
Future policy benefits..............................................  $4,843,690       $5,040,002
Ceded future policy benefits........................................     642,801          745,554
Payable for securities purchased....................................         574           43,758
Other accounts payable and liabilities..............................      66,687           66,298
Deferred income taxes...............................................      41,364           64,045
Liabilities related to separate accounts............................   1,507,984        1,499,471
                                                                      ----------       ----------
          Total liabilities.........................................   7,103,100        7,459,128
                                                                      ----------       ----------
Commitments and contingent liabilities
STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
Capital stock--$10 par value,
  authorized 300,000 shares; outstanding 250,000 shares.............       2,500            2,500
Additional paid-in capital..........................................     491,994          409,423
Unrealized gain (loss) on investments...............................    (236,443)          93,096
Retained earnings...................................................     175,929          149,568
                                                                      ----------       ----------
          Total stockholder's equity................................     433,980          654,587
                                                                      ----------       ----------
          Total liabilities and stockholder's equity................  $7,537,080       $8,113,715
                                                                      ==========       ==========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      B-20
<PAGE>   82
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
                                 (in thousands)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                     YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                             ---------------------------------------
                                                               1994           1993           1992
                                                             ---------      ---------      ---------
<S>                                                          <C>            <C>            <C>
REVENUE
Net investment income......................................   $353,084       $339,274       $404,758
Realized investment losses.................................    (54,557)       (27,584)       (83,502)
Fees and other income......................................     31,950         25,687         32,360
                                                              --------       --------       --------
          Total revenue....................................    330,477        337,377        353,616
                                                              --------       --------       --------
BENEFITS AND EXPENSES
Benefits and interest credited to policyholders............    248,494        275,689        348,555
Commissions, taxes, licenses and fees......................     26,910         33,875         49,309
Operating expenses.........................................     25,324         24,383         38,617
Deferral of insurance acquisition costs....................    (31,852)       (31,781)       (46,649)
Amortization of insurance acquisition costs................     20,809         12,376         29,119
                                                              --------       --------       --------
          Total benefits and expenses......................    289,685        314,542        418,951
                                                              --------       --------       --------
Income (loss) before income tax expense (benefit) and
  cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles....     40,792         22,835        (65,335)
Income tax expense (benefit)...............................     14,431         11,142        (13,730)
                                                              --------       --------       --------
          Income (loss) before cumulative effect of changes
            in accounting principles.......................     26,361         11,693        (51,605)
Cumulative effect of changes in accounting principles, net
  of tax...................................................         --          2,350           (281)
                                                              --------       --------       --------
          Net income (loss)................................   $ 26,361       $ 14,043       $(51,886)
                                                              ========       ========       ========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      B-21
<PAGE>   83
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                 CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY
                                 (in thousands)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             1994            1993            1992
                                                           ---------       ---------       ---------
<S>                                                        <C>             <C>             <C>
CAPITAL STOCK, beginning and end of year.................   $  2,500        $  2,500        $  2,500
                                                            --------        --------        --------
ADDITIONAL PAID-IN CAPITAL, beginning of year............    409,423         310,237         280,237
Capital contributions from Parent........................     82,500          90,000          30,000
Transfer of limited partnership interest to Parent.......         71           9,186              --
                                                            --------        --------        --------
          End of year....................................    491,994         409,423         310,237
                                                            --------        --------        --------
UNREALIZED GAIN (LOSS) ON INVESTMENTS, beginning of
  year...................................................     93,096          39,872            (830)
Unrealized gain (loss) on revaluation of investments,
  net....................................................   (329,539)         53,224          40,702
                                                            --------        --------        --------
          End of year....................................   (236,443)         93,096          39,872
                                                            --------        --------        --------
RETAINED EARNINGS, beginning of year.....................    149,568         136,055         187,941
Net income (loss)........................................     26,361          14,043         (51,886)
Dividend of limited partnership interest to Parent.......         --            (530)             --
                                                            --------        --------        --------
          End of year....................................    175,929         149,568         136,055
                                                            --------        --------        --------
          Total stockholder's equity.....................   $433,980        $654,587        $488,664
                                                            ========        ========        ========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      B-22
<PAGE>   84
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES

                      CONSOLIDATED STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
                                 (in thousands)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                 YEAR ENDED DECEMBER 31
                                                      ---------------------------------------------
                                                         1994             1993             1992
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
<S>                                                   <C>              <C>              <C>
CASH FLOWS FROM OPERATING ACTIVITIES
  Net income (loss).................................  $    26,361      $    14,043      $   (51,886)
  Reconcilement of net income (loss) to net cash
     provided:
     Realized investment losses.....................       54,557           27,584           83,502
     Interest credited and other charges............      242,591          269,766          343,788
     Deferred insurance acquisition costs...........      (11,043)         (19,405)         (17,529)
     Amortization of discount and premium on
       investments..................................       (1,383)            (203)          (4,699)
     Deferred income taxes..........................       20,809           14,596           16,599
     Other, net.....................................      (13,352)          30,148          (33,740)
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
          Net cash provided from operating
            activities..............................      318,540          336,529          336,035
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
CASH FLOWS FROM INVESTING ACTIVITIES
  Cash from investments sold or matured:
     Fixed maturities held to maturity..............      144,717          187,949           96,588
     Fixed maturities sold prior to maturity........      910,913        1,652,119        2,939,784
     Mortgage loans, policy loans and other invested
       assets.......................................      536,668          881,505          557,237
  Cost of investments purchased or loans originated:
     Fixed maturities...............................   (1,447,393)      (2,322,085)      (3,456,016)
     Mortgage loans, policy loans and other invested
       assets.......................................     (281,059)        (443,445)        (326,899)
  Short-term investments, net.......................      198,299         (214,999)         474,280
  Net change in receivable and payable for
     securities transactions........................      (16,553)          39,078          (70,088)
  Net reductions in fixed assets....................        2,678            8,062            2,667
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
          Net cash provided by (used in) investing
            activities..............................       48,270         (211,816)         217,553
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
CASH FLOWS FROM FINANCING ACTIVITIES
  Policyholder account balances:
     Deposits.......................................      215,034          246,219          440,576
     Withdrawals....................................     (652,513)        (516,340)        (498,287)
  Capital contributions from Parent.................       82,500           90,000           30,000
  Reinsured life reserves...........................           --               --         (515,684)
  Other.............................................        3,871           16,776            7,934
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
          Net cash used in financing activities.....     (351,108)        (163,345)        (535,461)
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
               Net increase (decrease) in cash......       15,702          (38,632)          18,127
CASH, beginning of period...........................        7,487           46,119           27,992
                                                      -----------      -----------      -----------
CASH, end of period.................................  $    23,189      $     7,487      $    46,119
                                                      ===========      ===========      ===========
</TABLE>
 
See accompanying notes to consolidated financial statements.
 
                                      B-23
<PAGE>   85
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

(1) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
BASIS OF PRESENTATION
 
Kemper Investors Life Insurance Company and subsidiaries (the "Company") issues
fixed and variable annuity products and interest-sensitive life insurance
products marketed primarily through a network of financial institutions,
nonaffiliated and affiliated securities brokerage firms, insurance agents and
financial planners. The Company is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Kemper Financial
Companies, Inc. ("KFC"), which in turn is a holding company formed by Kemper
Corporation ("Kemper"), the Company's ultimate parent.
 
The consolidated financial statements have been prepared in accordance with
generally accepted accounting principles. The statements include the accounts of
the Company on a consolidated basis. All significant intercompany balances and
transactions have been eliminated.
 
LIFE INSURANCE REVENUE AND EXPENSES
 
Revenue for annuities and interest-sensitive life products consists of
investment income, and policy charges such as mortality, expense and surrender
charges. Expenses consist of benefits and interest credited to contracts, policy
maintenance costs and amortization of deferred insurance acquisition costs. Also
reflected in fees and other income are ceding commissions received as a result
of certain reinsurance transactions entered into by the Company during 1992.
(See the note captioned "Reinsurance" on page B-38.)
 
DEFERRED INSURANCE ACQUISITION COSTS
 
The costs of acquiring new business, principally commission expense and certain
policy issuance and underwriting expenses, have been deferred to the extent they
are recoverable from estimated future gross profits on the related contracts and
policies. The deferred insurance acquisition costs for annuities, separate
account business and interest-sensitive life products are being amortized over
the estimated contract life in relation to the present value of estimated gross
profits. Beginning in 1994, deferred insurance acquisition costs reflect the
estimated impact of unrealized gains or losses on fixed maturities held as
available for sale in the investment portfolio, through a credit or charge to
stockholder's equity, net of income tax.
 
FUTURE POLICY BENEFITS
 
Liabilities for future policy benefits related to annuities and
interest-sensitive life contracts reflect net premiums received plus interest
credited during the contract accumulation period and the present value of future
payments for contracts that have annuitized. Current interest rates credited
during the contract accumulation period range from 4 percent to 8.75 percent.
Future minimum guaranteed interest rates vary from 4 percent to 8.75 percent for
periods ranging from a portion of 1995 up to a portion of 1999 and are generally
3 percent to 4.5 percent thereafter. For contracts that have annuitized,
interest rates that are used in determining the present value of future payments
range principally from 3 percent to 11.25 percent.
 
INVESTED ASSETS AND RELATED INCOME
 
Investments in fixed maturities (bonds and redeemable preferred stocks) are
carried at market value at December 31, 1994 and 1993, as they are currently
considered available for sale. Short-term investments are carried at cost, which
approximates market value. Equity securities of nonrelated companies are
generally carried at market value using the closing prices as of the balance
sheet date derived from either a major securities exchange or the National
Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quotations system.
 
Mortgage loans are carried at their unpaid balance net of unamortized discount
and any applicable reserve. Other real estate-related investments net of any
applicable reserve and write-downs include certain bonds issued by real
 
                                      B-24
<PAGE>   86
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(1) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

estate finance or development companies; notes receivable from real estate
ventures; investments in real estate ventures carried at cost, adjusted for the
equity in the operating income or loss of such ventures; and real estate owned
carried primarily at fair value.
 
The Company evaluates its real estate-related assets (including accrued
interest) by estimating the probabilities of loss utilizing various projections
that include several factors relating to the borrower, property, term of the
loan, tenant composition, rental rates, other supply and demand factors and
overall economic conditions. Real estate reserves are established when declines
in collateral values, estimated in light of current economic conditions and
calculated in conformity with Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
("SFAS") 114, indicate a likelihood of loss. Generally, the reserve is based
upon the excess of the loan amount over the estimated future cash flows from the
loan discounted at the loan's contractual rate of interest taking into
consideration the effects of recourse to, and subordination of loans held by,
affiliated non-life realty companies. Changes in the Company's real estate
reserves and write-downs are included in revenue as realized investment gain or
loss.
 
The Company adopted SFAS 114, ACCOUNTING BY CREDITORS FOR IMPAIRMENT OF A LOAN,
in the fourth quarter of 1993. SFAS 114 defines "impaired loans" as loans in
which it is probable that a creditor will be unable to collect all amounts due
according to the contractual terms of the loan agreement. In the fourth quarter
of 1994, the Company adopted SFAS 118, ACCOUNTING BY CREDITORS FOR IMPAIRMENT OF
A LOAN--INCOME RECOGNITION AND DISCLOSURES. SFAS 118 amends SFAS 114, providing
clarification of income recognition issues and requiring additional disclosures
relating to impaired loans. The adoption of SFAS 118 had no effect on the
Company's financial position or results of operations at or for the year ended
December 31, 1994.
 
At December 31, 1994 and 1993, total impaired loans amounted to $75.9 million
and $179.4 million, respectively. Impaired loans with reserves were $67.6
million and $91.9 million with corresponding reserves of $18.8 million and $38.5
million at December 31, 1994 and 1993, respectively. In determining reserves
relative to impaired loans, the Company also considered the deficit in equity
investments in real estate of $2.0 million and $35.0 million at December 31,
1994 and 1993, respectively.
 
The Company had an average balance of $93.9 million and $158.0 million in
impaired loans for 1994 and 1993, respectively. Cash payments received on
impaired loans are generally applied to reduce the outstanding loan balance. At
December 31, 1994 and 1993, loans on nonaccrual status amounted to $274.6
million and $563.6 million, respectively. Impaired loans are generally included
in the Company's nonaccrual loans. The additional amount of nonaccrual loans in
excess of impaired loans represents the Company's consideration of market risks
associated with the real estate loan portfolio.
 
Upon adoption of SFAS 114, the Company determined that its previous disclosures
relating to impaired loans and recorded real estate reserves were adequate. As
such, restating prior quarters' operating results for the impact of SFAS 114 was
not considered necessary.
 
Policy loans are carried at their unpaid balance. Other invested assets consist
primarily of venture capital and a leveraged lease and are carried at cost.
 
Realized gains or losses on sales of investments, determined on the basis of
identifiable cost on the disposition of the respective investment, recognition
of other-than-temporary declines in value and changes in real estate-related
reserves and write-downs are included in revenue. Unrealized gains or losses on
revaluation of investments are credited or charged to stockholder's equity net
of deferred income tax.
 
The amortized cost of fixed maturities is adjusted for amortization of premiums
and accretion of discounts to maturity, or in the case of mortgage-backed
securities, over the estimated life of the security. Such amortization is
included in net interest income. Amortization of the discount or premium from
mortgage-backed securities is recognized using a level effective yield method
which considers the estimated timing and amount of prepayments of the underlying
mortgage loans and is adjusted to reflect differences which arise between the
prepayments originally anticipated and the actual prepayments received and
currently anticipated. To the extent that the estimated lives of mortgage-backed
securities change as a result of changes in prepayment rates, the adjustment is
also included in net investment income. The Company does not accrue interest
income on fixed maturities deemed to be impaired on
 
                                      B-25
<PAGE>   87
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(1) SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)

an other-than-temporary basis, or on mortgage loans, real estate-related bonds
and other real estate loans where the likelihood of collection of interest is
doubtful.
 
SEPARATE ACCOUNT BUSINESS
 
The assets and liabilities of the separate accounts represent segregated funds
administered and invested by the Company for purposes of funding variable
annuity and variable life insurance contracts for the exclusive benefit of
variable annuity and variable life insurance contract holders. The Company
receives administrative fees from the separate account and retains varying
amounts of withdrawal charges to cover expenses in the event of early
withdrawals by contract holders. The assets and liabilities of the separate
accounts are carried at market value.
 
INCOME TAX
 
The operations of the Company are included in the consolidated federal income
tax return of Kemper. Income taxes receivable or payable are determined on a
separate return basis, and payments are received from or remitted to Kemper
pursuant to a tax allocation arrangement between Kemper and its subsidiaries,
including the Company. The Company generally receives a tax benefit for losses
to the extent such losses can be utilized in Kemper's consolidated tax return.
 
Upon adoption of SFAS 109, ACCOUNTING FOR INCOME TAXES, effective January 1,
1993, deferred taxes are provided on the temporary differences between the tax
and financial statement basis of assets and liabilities. Deferred income tax
previously was provided on the tax effects of timing differences between
financial statement and taxable income.
 
FIXED ASSETS
 
Fixed assets, consisting primarily of electronic data processing equipment, are
recorded at cost and are depreciated over the useful lives of the assets on a
straight-line method. At December 31, 1994 and 1993, the accumulated
depreciation on fixed assets was $20.8 million and $21.6 million, respectively.
 
OTHER
 
Certain reclassifications have been made in the consolidated financial
statements for the years 1993 and 1992 to conform to 1994 reporting.
 
(2) CASH FLOW INFORMATION
 
The Company defines cash as cash in banks and money market accounts. Federal
income tax paid to (refunded by) Kemper under the tax allocation arrangement for
the years ended December 31, 1994, 1993 and 1992 amounted to $(10.7) million,
$4.2 million and $7.8 million, respectively.
 
Not reflected in the statement of cash flows are rollovers of mortgage loans,
other loans and investments totaling $57 million, $146 million and $229 million
in 1994, 1993 and 1992, respectively.
 
Reflected in the statement of cash flows is the 1992 sale of $515.7 million of
reinsured life reserves for which the Company delivered an investment portfolio
that included $151.4 million of mortgage loans, $294.8 million of fixed
maturities and $69.5 million of other investments.
 
The Company also transferred its equity ownership interests in two limited
partnerships during 1994 and 1993. (See the note captioned "Related-Party
Transactions" on page B-38.)
 
                                      B-26
<PAGE>   88
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(3) INVESTED ASSETS AND RELATED INCOME
 
Fixed maturities are considered available for sale, depending upon certain
economic and business conditions. The Company is carrying its fixed maturity
investment portfolio at estimated market value, with the aggregate unrealized
appreciation or depreciation being recorded as a separate component of
stockholder's equity net of any applicable income tax effect. The carrying value
(estimated market value) of fixed maturities compared with amortized cost,
adjusted for other-than-temporary declines in value, at December 31, 1994 and
1993, was as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                 ESTIMATED UNREALIZED
                                                      CARRYING     AMORTIZED     ---------------------
(in thousands)                                         VALUE          COST        GAINS       LOSSES
                                                     ----------    ----------    --------    ---------
<S>                                                  <C>           <C>           <C>         <C>
1994
U.S. treasury securities and obligations of U.S.
  government agencies and authorities..............  $   10,682    $   10,998    $     24    $    (340)
Obligations of states and political subdivisions,
  special revenue and nonguaranteed................      25,021        25,691          --         (670)
Debt securities issued by foreign governments......     109,624       120,950          50      (11,376)
Corporate securities...............................   1,679,428     1,805,933       7,027     (133,532)
Mortgage-backed securities.........................   1,638,977     1,743,784          --     (104,807)
                                                     ----------    ----------    --------    ---------
       Total fixed maturities......................  $3,463,732    $3,707,356    $  7,101    $(250,725)
                                                     ==========    ==========    ========    =========
1993
U.S. treasury securities and obligations of U.S.
  government agencies and authorities..............  $   11,686    $   11,464    $    240    $     (18)
Obligations of states and political subdivisions,
  special revenue and nonguaranteed................      16,434        15,232       1,202           --
Debt securities issued by foreign governments......     114,275       112,825       2,782       (1,332)
Corporate securities...............................   2,025,888     1,948,268      89,445      (11,825)
Mortgage-backed securities.........................   1,272,941     1,245,413      34,268       (6,740)
                                                     ----------    ----------    --------    ---------
       Total fixed maturities......................  $3,441,224    $3,333,202    $127,937    $ (19,915)
                                                     ==========    ==========    ========    =========
</TABLE>
 
Upon default or indication of potential default by an issuer of fixed maturity
securities, the Company-owned issue(s) of such issuer would be placed on
nonaccrual status and, since declines in market value would no longer be
considered by the Company to be temporary, would be analyzed for possible
write-down. Any such issue would be written down to its net realizable value,
determined in the manner described in the following paragraph, during the fiscal
quarter in which the impairment was determined to have become other than
temporary, unless such net realizable value exceeded the Company's carrying
value for such issue. Thereafter, each issue on nonaccrual status is regularly
reviewed, and additional write-downs may be taken in light of later
developments.
 
The Company's computation of net realizable value involves judgments and
estimates, so such value should be used with care. Such value determination
considers such factors as the existence and value of any collateral security;
the capital structure of the issuer; the level of actual and expected market
interest rates; where the issue ranks in comparison with other debt of the
issuer; the economic and competitive environment of the issuer and its business;
the Company's view on the likelihood of success of any proposed issuer
restructuring plan; and the timing, type and amount of any restructured
securities that the Company anticipates it will receive.
 
                                      B-27
<PAGE>   89
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(3) INVESTED ASSETS AND RELATED INCOME (CONTINUED)

The Company's $907 million real estate portfolio consists of the following:
 
SUMMARY OF GROSS AND NET REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS
(in millions)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     DECEMBER 31
                                                                                  -----------------
                                                                                   1994       1993
                                                                                  ------     ------
<S>                                                                               <C>        <C>
Investments before reserves, write-downs and net joint venture operating
  losses:
  Joint venture mortgage loans.................................................   $  358     $  766
  Third-party mortgage loans...................................................      353        200
  Other real estate-related investments........................................      350        354
                                                                                  ------     ------
       Subtotal................................................................    1,061      1,320
  Reserves.....................................................................      (43)       (61)
  Write-downs..................................................................      (97)       (88)
  Cumulative net operating losses of joint ventures owned......................      (14)       (17)
                                                                                  ------     ------
Net real estate investments....................................................   $  907     $1,154
                                                                                  ======     ======
</TABLE>
 
At December 31, 1994, the Company had $216.2 million of mortgage loans and other
real estate-related investments (net of reserves and write-downs) that were
non-income producing for the preceding 12 months.
 
The Company evaluates its real estate-related assets (including accrued
interest) by estimating the probabilities of loss utilizing various projections
that include several factors relating to the borrower, property, term of the
loan, tenant composition, rental rates, other supply and demand factors and
overall economic conditions. Because the Company's real estate review process
includes estimates, there can be no assurance that current estimates will prove
accurate over time due to changing economic conditions and other factors.
 
The Company's real estate reserve was allocated as follows:
 
REAL ESTATE RESERVE
(in millions)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         JOINT VENTURE    THIRD-PARTY      OTHER REAL
                                                           MORTGAGE        MORTGAGE      ESTATE-RELATED
                                                             LOANS           LOANS        INVESTMENTS      TOTAL
                                                         -------------    -----------    --------------    ------
<S>                                                      <C>              <C>            <C>               <C>
Balance at 12/31/92...................................       $ 64.4          $ 5.0            $23.4        $ 92.8
1993 change in reserve................................        (29.3)          (5.0)             2.6         (31.7)
                                                             ------          -----            -----        ------
Balance at 12/31/93...................................         35.1             --             26.0          61.1
1994 change in reserve................................        (28.0)          10.4              (.5)        (18.1)
                                                             ------          -----            -----        ------
Balance at 12/31/94...................................       $  7.1          $10.4            $25.5        $ 43.0
                                                             ======          =====            =====        ======
</TABLE>
 
In addition to the reserve, the Company's provision for real estate-related
losses (on assets held at the respective period end) included cumulative
write-downs (both by the Company and including the Company's share of write-
downs by joint ventures) totaling $96.6 million at December 31, 1994 and $88.3
million at December 31, 1993. The 1994 decrease in reserves was primarily due to
write-downs which increased in 1994 as reserves for general real estate risks
were allocated to certain specific loans and equity investments in real estate,
particularly with respect to investments in land. In 1993, the Company's real
estate reserve and write-downs reflected declining valuations in the Company's
real estate portfolio, offset in part by the positive effects of recourse to,
and subordination of loans held by, affiliated non-life realty companies. The
declining valuations in 1993 reflected the Company's view, based on economic
data then available, that there will be slower than previously anticipated
economic growth in the future and therefore slower absorption of real estate,
particularly undeveloped land. Due to the Company's assessment for slower
economic growth, its plans with respect to certain projects were changed to
reflect deferrals of their commencement or completion.
 
                                      B-28
<PAGE>   90
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(3) INVESTED ASSETS AND RELATED INCOME (CONTINUED)

The Company's real estate experience could continue to be adversely affected by
overbuilding and weak economic conditions in certain real estate markets and by
fairly restrictive lending practices by banks and other lenders. Stagnant or
worsening economic conditions in the areas in which the Company has made loans,
or additional adverse information becoming known to the Company through its
regular reviews or otherwise, could result in higher levels of problem loans or
potential problem loans, reductions in the value of real estate collateral and
adjustments to the real estate reserve. The Company's net income and
stockholder's equity could be materially reduced in future periods if real
estate market conditions remain stagnant or worsen in areas where the Company's
portfolio is located.
 
Current conditions in the real estate markets have been adversely affecting the
financial resources of certain of the Company's joint venture partners. Every
partner, however, remains active in the control of its respective joint
ventures. In evaluating a partner's ability to meet its financial commitments,
the Company considers the amount of all applicable debt and the value of all
properties within that portion of the Company's portfolio consisting of loans to
and investments in joint ventures with such partner.
 
The following table is a summary of the Company's troubled real estate-related
investments:
 
TROUBLED REAL ESTATE-RELATED INVESTMENTS
(BEFORE RESERVES AND WRITE-DOWNS, EXCEPT FOR REAL ESTATE OWNED)
(in millions)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                   DECEMBER 31
                                                                              ---------------------
                                                                               1994           1993
                                                                              ------         ------
<S>                                                                           <C>            <C>
Potential problem loans(1).................................................   $ 57.9         $ 20.2
Past due loans(2)..........................................................       --            2.8
Nonaccrual loans(3)........................................................    274.6          563.6
Restructured loans (currently performing)(4)...............................     50.5           56.7
Real estate owned(5).......................................................     57.3           55.1
                                                                              ------         ------
       Total(6)(7).........................................................   $440.3         $698.4
                                                                              ======         ======
</TABLE>
 
---------------
(1) These are real estate-related investments where the Company, based on known
    information, has serious doubts about the borrowers' abilities to comply
    with present repayment terms and which the Company anticipates may go into
    nonaccrual, past due or restructured status.
(2) Interest more than 90 days past due but not on nonaccrual status.
(3) The Company does not accrue interest on real estate-related investments when
    it judges that the likelihood of collection of interest is doubtful. The
    1994 decrease in nonaccrual loans primarily reflected sales and foreclosures
    as well as write-offs of certain fully reserved loans.
(4) The Company defines a "restructuring" of debt as an event whereby the
    Company, for economic or legal reasons related to the debtor's financial
    difficulties, grants a concession to the debtor it would not otherwise
    consider. Such concessions either stem from an agreement between the Company
    and the debtor or are imposed by law or a court. By this definition,
    restructured loans do not include any loan that, upon the expiration of its
    term, both repays its principal and pays interest then due from the proceeds
    of a new loan that the Company, at its option, may extend (roll over).
(5) Real estate owned is carried at fair value and includes deeds in lieu of
    foreclosure and certain purchased property. Cumulative write-downs to fair
    value were $67.5 million and $20.6 million at December 31, 1994 and 1993,
    respectively.
(6) Total reserves and cumulative write-downs on properties owned at December
    31, 1994 (excluding fair value adjustments to real estate owned) were 16.4
    percent of total troubled real estate-related investments and 7.4 percent of
    the Company's total real estate portfolio before reserves and write-downs.
(7) Equity investments in real estate are not defined as part of, and therefore
    are not taken into account in calculating, total troubled real estate. The
    Company's equity investments also involve real estate risks.
 
Based on the level of troubled real estate-related investments the Company
experienced in 1994 and 1993, the Company anticipates additional foreclosures
and deeds in lieu of foreclosure in 1995 and beyond. Any consolidation
 
                                      B-29
<PAGE>   91
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(3) INVESTED ASSETS AND RELATED INCOME (CONTINUED)

accounting resulting from foreclosures would add the related ventures' assets
and senior third-party liabilities to the Company's balance sheet and eliminate
the Company's loans to such ventures.
 
Due to the adverse real estate environment affecting the Company's portfolio in
recent years, the Company has continued to devote significant attention to its
real estate portfolio, enhancing monitoring of the portfolio and formulating
specific action plans addressing nonperforming and potential problem credits.
Since 1991, the Company has intensified its attention to evaluating the asset
quality, cash flow and prospects associated with each of its projects. The
Company continues to analyze various potential transactions designed to reduce
both its joint venture operating losses and the amount of its real
estate-related investments. Specific types of transactions under consideration
(and previously utilized) include loan sales, property sales, mortgage
refinancings and real estate investment trusts. However, there can be no
assurance that such efforts will result in continued improvements in the
performance of the Company's real estate portfolio.
 
At December 31, 1994, securities carried at approximately $5.3 million were on
deposit with governmental agencies as required by law.
 
Proceeds from sales of investments in fixed maturities prior to maturity were
$910.9 million, $1.7 billion and $2.9 billion during 1994, 1993 and 1992,
respectively. Gross gains of $6.0 million, $80.4 million and $69.5 million and
gross losses of $55.9 million, $37.8 million and $101.7 million were realized on
sales of fixed maturities in 1994, 1993 and 1992, respectively. Gross unrealized
gains and losses on equity securities at December 31, 1994 amounted to $469
thousand and $649 thousand, respectively.
 
The following table sets forth the maturity aging schedule of fixed maturity
investments at December 31, 1994:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                            CARRYING     AMORTIZED
(in thousands)                                                               VALUE       COST VALUE
                                                                           ----------    ----------
<S>                                                                        <C>           <C>
One year or less........................................................   $    1,135    $    1,135
Over one year through five..............................................      346,841       357,697
Over five years through ten.............................................    1,011,526     1,088,547
Over ten years..........................................................      465,253       516,193
Securities not due at a single maturity date(1).........................    1,638,977     1,743,784
                                                                           ----------    ----------
       Total fixed maturities...........................................   $3,463,732    $3,707,356
                                                                           ==========    ==========
</TABLE>
 
---------------
(1) Weighted average maturity of 7 years.
 
The sources of net investment income were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(in thousands)                                                   1994          1993          1992
                                                               --------      --------      --------
<S>                                                            <C>           <C>           <C>
Interest and dividends on fixed maturities..................   $274,231      $221,144      $210,047
Dividends on equity securities..............................      1,751         3,084         2,061
Income from short-term investments..........................     10,668        12,155        18,249
Income from mortgage loans..................................     41,713        82,028       149,816
Income from policy loans....................................     18,517        16,826        17,052
Income from other real estate-related investments...........     21,239        11,755        17,915
Income from other loans and investments.....................      3,533         8,008         2,580
                                                               --------      --------      --------
       Total investment income..............................    371,652       355,000       417,720
Investment expense..........................................    (18,568)      (15,726)      (12,962)
                                                               --------      --------      --------
       Net investment income................................   $353,084      $339,274      $404,758
                                                               ========      ========      ========
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-30
<PAGE>   92
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(3) INVESTED ASSETS AND RELATED INCOME (CONTINUED)

Unrealized gains (losses) are computed below as follows: fixed maturities--the
difference between market and amortized cost, adjusted for other-than-temporary
declines in value; equity securities and other--the difference between market
value and cost. The realized and change in unrealized investment gains (losses)
by class of investment for the years ended December 31, 1994, 1993 and 1992 were
as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                    REALIZED GAINS (LOSSES)
                                                           ------------------------------------------
(in thousands)                                               1994             1993             1992
                                                           --------         --------         --------
<S>                                                        <C>              <C>              <C>
Real estate-related....................................    $(41,720)        $(79,652)        $(94,995)
Fixed maturities.......................................     (49,857)          36,234           11,150
Equity securities......................................      28,243           17,086              109
Other..................................................       8,777           (1,252)             234
                                                           --------         --------         --------
  Realized investment losses before income tax
     benefit...........................................     (54,557)         (27,584)         (83,502)
Income tax benefit.....................................     (19,095)          (7,917)         (21,256)
                                                           --------         --------         --------
  Net realized investment losses.......................    $(35,462)        $(19,667)        $(62,246)
                                                           ========         ========         ========
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             CHANGE IN UNREALIZED GAINS (LOSSES)
                                                          ------------------------------------------
(in thousands)                                               1994             1993             1992
                                                          ---------         -------         --------
<S>                                                       <C>               <C>             <C>
Fixed maturities......................................    $(351,646)        $60,258         $ 88,820
Equity securities.....................................      (32,710)         19,882           14,882
Adjustment to deferred insurance acquisition costs....       11,325              --               --
                                                          ---------         -------         --------
  Unrealized gain (loss) before income tax............     (373,031)         80,140          103,702
Income tax expense (benefit)..........................      (43,492)         26,916           20,968
                                                          ---------         -------         --------
       Net unrealized gain (loss) on investments......    $(329,539)        $53,224         $ 82,734
                                                          =========         =======         ========
</TABLE>
 
(4) UNCONSOLIDATED INVESTEES
 
At December 31, 1994, the Company, along with other Kemper subsidiaries,
directly held partnership interests in a number of real estate joint ventures.
Also, the Company and Lumbermens Mutual Casualty Company ("Lumbermens") and
certain subsidiaries of Kemper and Lumbermens are partners in a master limited
partnership (the "MLP") formed, effective January 1, 1993, to hold the equity
interests each partner's organization separately held previously in joint
ventures with Peter B. Bedford or his affiliates ("Bedford"), and in January
1994, the MLP acquired substantially all of Bedford's interests in such joint
ventures. Kemper and Lumbermens each own 50 percent of the MLP.
 
The Company's direct and indirect real estate joint venture investments are
accounted for utilizing the equity method, with the Company recording its share
of the operating results of the respective partnerships. The Company, as an
equity owner, has the ability to fund, and historically has elected to fund,
operating requirements of certain of the joint ventures. Consolidation
accounting methods are not utilized as the Company, in most instances, does not
own more than 50 percent in the aggregate, and in any event, major decisions of
the partnership must be made jointly by all partners.
 
                                      B-31
<PAGE>   93
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(4) UNCONSOLIDATED INVESTEES (CONTINUED)

Selected financial information, as of December 31, 1994 and 1993, is presented
below separately for the MLP, ventures with the Prime Group, Inc. or its
affiliates ("Prime"), and other real estate-related partnerships. (See the note
captioned "Concentration of Credit Risk" on page B-34.) Such real estate-related
information for 1994 and 1993 was based on unaudited financial information
received by the Company from the respective entities.
 
SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
(in thousands)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        REAL ESTATE-RELATED
                                                      -------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          PRIME-RELATED
                                                                    -------------------------
                                                         MLP          DOMESTIC       SPANISH        OTHER
                                                       VENTURES     PARTNERSHIPS    PROJECTS     PARTNERSHIPS
                                                      ----------    ------------    ---------    ------------
<S>                                                   <C>           <C>             <C>          <C>
1994
Revenue............................................   $  104,827      $ 14,966      $  22,095      $ 52,295
Expenses...........................................      192,492        18,881         45,256        49,011
                                                      ----------      --------      ---------      --------  
Operating income (loss)............................      (87,665)       (3,915)       (23,161)        3,284
Asset writedowns(1)................................      (23,536)         (621)      (102,031)      (17,037)
                                                      ----------      --------      ---------      --------  
Net loss...........................................   $ (111,201)     $ (4,536)     $(125,192)     $(13,753)
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========
The Company's share of operating loss(1)...........   $     (121)     $ (1,140)     $      --      $   (145)
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========
The Company's share of net loss(1).................   $     (156)     $ (1,244)     $      --      $ (4,915)
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========

Properties at cost, net of depreciation............   $  879,352      $ 55,804      $ 338,923      $ 38,075
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========
Total assets.......................................   $1,049,019      $ 77,751      $ 373,637      $153,785
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========
Mortgages, notes payable and related accrued
  interest payable to:
  The Company......................................   $  207,909      $ 31,767      $  36,606      $  7,436
  Kemper subsidiaries other than the Company.......      417,967         2,713        394,764         2,411
  Lumbermens.......................................      181,325            --         92,592        26,734
  Fidelity Life Association........................       46,036            --             --            --
  Other third parties..............................      411,795        42,048         98,076        51,303

Total liabilities..................................   $1,354,624      $ 82,770      $ 660,557      $110,334
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========
The Company's net equity investment(1).............   $    1,953      $   (585)     $  36,624      $  7,415
                                                      ==========      ========      =========      ========
</TABLE>
 
---------------
(1) Excluded from the Company's share of operating and net losses and related
    net equity investment in real estate-related entities is interest expense
    related to loans by the Company which are on nonaccrual status and write-
    downs taken directly by the Company. Included in the Company's share of
    current year results are immaterial prior year audit adjustments by the
    respective entities.
 
Included in the immediately preceding and immediately following tables are real
estate loans to partnerships or corporations in which the Company and other
Kemper subsidiaries hold equity interests. At December 31, 1994, the Company had
other joint venture-related loans totaling $16.0 million before reserves, not
included in the table above, to partnerships in which the Company has options to
acquire equity interests or has made loans with
 
                                      B-32
<PAGE>   94
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(4) UNCONSOLIDATED INVESTEES (CONTINUED)

additional interest features. These joint venture-related loans totaled $38.5
million at December 31, 1993. Also at December 31, 1994, the Company had joint
venture-related loans totaling $37.5 million before reserves, not included in
the table above, to partnerships in which Lumbermens and Fidelity Life
Association, an affiliated mutual insurance company ("FLA"), had equity
interests. These joint venture-related loans totaled $68.1 million before
reserves at December 31, 1993. (See the note captioned "Financial
Instruments--Off-Balance-Sheet Risk" on page B-40.)
 
SELECTED FINANCIAL INFORMATION
(in thousands)
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        REAL ESTATE-RELATED
                                                       ------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          PRIME-RELATED
                                                                     ------------------------
                                                          MLP          DOMESTIC      SPANISH        OTHER
                                                        VENTURES     PARTNERSHIPS    PROJECTS    PARTNERSHIPS
                                                       ----------    ------------    --------    ------------
<S>                                                    <C>           <C>             <C>         <C>
1993
Revenue.............................................   $  101,694      $ 50,636      $ 36,607      $ 60,701
Expenses............................................      226,282        65,824        76,449        66,978
                                                       ----------      --------      --------      --------   
Operating loss......................................     (124,588)      (15,188)      (39,842)       (6,277)
Asset writedowns(1).................................     (107,135)           --       (39,274)           --
                                                       ----------      --------      --------      --------  
Net loss............................................   $ (231,723)     $(15,188)     $(79,116)     $ (6,277)
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========
The Company's share of operating loss(1)............   $     (172)     $ (7,548)     $     --      $   (852)
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========
The Company's share of net loss(1)..................   $     (409)     $ (7,548)     $     --      $   (852)
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========

Properties at cost, net of depreciation.............   $1,161,025      $278,635      $253,321      $ 46,184
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========
Total assets........................................   $1,426,638      $375,738      $292,825      $225,019
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========
Mortgages, notes payable and related accrued
  interest payable to:
  The Company.......................................   $  298,447      $ 48,303      $ 31,871      $  5,287
  Kemper subsidiaries other than the Company........      490,031        56,602       305,335         5,430
  Lumbermens........................................      245,890        17,262        51,423        30,226
  Fidelity Life Association.........................       65,691            --            --            --
  Other third parties...............................      752,239       199,765        88,558        56,622

Total liabilities...................................   $1,895,260      $390,888      $539,728      $153,334
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========
The Company's net equity investment(1)..............   $   18,548      $  7,626      $ 31,871      $ 15,524
                                                       ==========      ========      ========      ========
</TABLE>
 
---------------
(1) Excluded from the Company's share of operating and net losses and related
    net equity investment in real estate-related entities is interest expense
    related to loans by the Company which are on nonaccrual status and write-
    downs taken directly by the Company. Included in the Company's share of
    current year results are immaterial prior year audit adjustments by the
    respective entities.
 
                                      B-33
<PAGE>   95
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(5) CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK
 
The Company generally strives to maintain a diversified invested asset
portfolio; however, certain concentrations of credit risk exist, including
mortgage-backed securities and real estate.
 
Approximately 49.2 percent of the Company's investment-grade fixed maturities at
December 31, 1994 were mortgage-backed securities. These investments consist
primarily of marketable mortgage pass-through securities issued by the
Government National Mortgage Association, the Federal National Mortgage
Association or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation and other
investment-grade securities collateralized by mortgage pass-through securities
issued by these entities. The Company has not made any material investments in
interest-only or other similarly volatile tranches of mortgage-backed
securities. The Company's mortgage-backed investments are generally of AAA
credit quality, and the markets for the Company's investments in mortgage-backed
securities have been and are expected to remain liquid.
 
Future investment income from mortgage-backed securities may be affected by the
timing of principal payments and the yields on reinvestment alternatives
available at the time of such payments. Due to the fact that the Company's
investments in mortgage-backed securities predominately date from recent years,
the current rise in interest rates is not expected to cause any material
unanticipated extension of the average maturities of these investments.
Prepayment activity on securities purchased at a discount is not expected to
result in any material losses to the Company because such prepayment would
generally accelerate the reporting of the discounts as investment income.
Prepayments resulting from a decline in interest rates related to securities
purchased at a premium would accelerate the amortization of premiums on such
purchases which would result in reductions of investment income related to such
securities. At December 31, 1994, the Company had unamortized discounts and
premiums of $20.4 million and $14.8 million, respectively, related to
mortgage-backed securities. Given the credit quality, liquidity and anticipated
payment characteristics of the Company's investments in mortgage-backed
securities, the Company believes that the associated risk can be managed without
material adverse consequences on its consolidated financial statements.
 
The Company's real estate portfolio is distributed by geographic location and
property type, as shown in the following two tables:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                       <C>
GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1994
     California........................    26.9%
     Illinois..........................    26.2
     Texas.............................    11.2
     Ohio..............................     6.3
     Spain.............................     4.0
     Colorado..........................     3.8
     Oregon............................     3.0
     Indiana...........................     2.7
     Washington........................     2.7
     Hawaii............................     2.5
     Virginia..........................     2.5
     Florida...........................     2.1
     Other(1)..........................     6.1
                                          -----
          Total........................   100.0%
                                          =====

DISTRIBUTION BY PROPERTY TYPE AS OF DECEMBER 31, 1994
     Office............................    21.5%
     Land..............................    20.4
     Industrial........................    14.7
     Retail............................    13.9
     Hotel.............................    11.7
     Apartment.........................     5.0
     Residential.......................     4.7
     Mixed use.........................     2.1
     Other.............................     6.0
                                          -----
          Total........................   100.0%
                                          =====
</TABLE>
 
---------------
(1) No other single location exceeded 2.0 percent.
 
The Company had $246.3 million (5.0 percent of invested assets and cash), $240.5
million (4.9 percent of invested assets and cash) and $102.8 million (2.1
percent of invested assets and cash) of mortgage loans and other real estate
investments in California, Illinois and Texas, respectively, at December 31,
1994. The majority of the Illinois and Texas loans and other investments are
Prime-related. The majority of the California loans and other investments are
MLP-related. (See the note captioned "Unconsolidated Investees.") Real estate
markets have been depressed in recent periods in areas where most of the
Company's real estate portfolio is located. Southern California shows
 
                                      B-34
<PAGE>   96
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(5) CONCENTRATION OF CREDIT RISK (CONTINUED)

signs of improvement, although real estate market conditions there have
continued to be worse than in many other areas of the country. Northern
California and Illinois currently reflect some stabilization and improvement.
 
The Company had $184.9 million (3.8 percent of invested assets and cash) of
below investment-grade securities (including real estate-related bonds) totaling
$49.9 million, or 1.0 percent of invested assets and cash) at December 31, 1994.
 
At December 31, 1994, the Company held only one investment which exceeded 10
percent of stockholder's equity. This investment, amounting to $47.6 million, is
a joint venture mortgage loan to Lisle Park Plaza.
 
The following table shows the amounts of the Company's real estate portfolio at
December 31, 1994 which consisted of loans to or investments in joint ventures
with the MLP and Prime:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(in millions)                                                                      MLP       PRIME
                                                                                 ------     ------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>
Mortgage loans.................................................................  $161.6     $150.3
Real estate-related bonds......................................................     2.9       36.2
Other real estate loans........................................................    54.5       29.7
Real estate owned..............................................................    98.3         --
Equity investments.............................................................     7.4       42.9
Reserves.......................................................................    (8.9)     (21.0)
Write-downs....................................................................   (61.5)       (.1)
                                                                                 ------     ------
  Total........................................................................  $254.3     $238.0
                                                                                 ======     ======
</TABLE>
 
At December 31, 1994, the Company's real estate portfolio also included $36.6
million of loans carried as equity investments in real estate related to land
for office and retail development and residential projects located in Barcelona,
Spain. Such equity investments in Spain totaled $31.9 million at December 31,
1993, after accounting for fundings of $151.3 million during 1993. The Spanish
projects accounted for $29.4 million of net fundings during 1994 and represented
approximately 4.0 percent of the Company's real estate portfolio at December 31,
1994. These investments, which began in the late 1980s, accounted for $14.1
million of the December 31, 1994 off-balance-sheet commitments, of which the
Company expects to fund $7.1 million. Also during 1994, loans to the Spanish
projects totaling $24.7 million were sold at book value to an affiliated real
estate subsidiary of KFC.
 
Undeveloped land, including the Spanish projects, represented approximately 20.4
percent of the Company's real estate portfolio at December 31, 1994. To maximize
the value of certain land and other projects, additional development is
proceeding or is planned. Such development of existing projects may continue to
require substantial funding, either from the Company or third parties. In the
present real estate markets, third-party financing can require credit enhancing
arrangements (e.g., standby financing arrangements and loan commitments) from
the Company. The values of development projects are dependent on a number of
factors, including Kemper's and the Company's plans with respect thereto,
obtaining necessary permits and market demand for the permitted use of the
property. There can be no assurance that such permits will be obtained as
planned or at all, nor that such expenditures will occur as scheduled, nor that
Kemper's and the Company's plans with respect to such projects may not change
substantially.
 
(6) INCOME TAXES
 
Income tax expense (benefit) was as follows for the years ended December 31,
1994, 1993 and 1992:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(in thousands)                                                 1994           1993           1992
                                                              --------       --------       --------
<S>                                                           <C>            <C>            <C>
Current.....................................................   $(6,898)       $(5,773)      $ (9,457)
Deferred....................................................    21,329         16,915         (4,273)
                                                               -------        -------       --------
          Total.............................................   $14,431        $11,142       $(13,730)
                                                               =======        =======       ========
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-35
<PAGE>   97
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(6) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)

The actual income tax expense (benefit) for 1994, 1993 and 1992 differed from
the "expected" tax expense (benefit) for those years as displayed below.
"Expected" tax expense (benefit) was computed by applying the U.S. federal
corporate tax rate of 35 percent in 1994 and 1993 and 34 percent for 1992 to
income (loss) before income tax expense (benefit) and cumulative effect of
changes in accounting principles.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(in thousands)                                                 1994           1993           1992
                                                              --------       --------       --------
<S>                                                           <C>            <C>            <C>
Computed expected tax expense (benefit).....................   $14,277        $ 7,992       $(22,214)
Difference between "expected" and actual tax expense
  (benefit):
  State taxes...............................................       645            332            777
  Foreign tax credit........................................      (155)           358           (611)
  Change in tax rate........................................        --          1,441             --
  Change in valuation allowance.............................        --            701             --
  Unutilized capital losses.................................        --             --          8,286
  Other, net................................................      (336)           318             32
                                                               -------        -------       --------
          Total actual tax expense (benefit)................   $14,431        $11,142       $(13,730)
                                                               =======        =======       ========
</TABLE>
 
The Company adopted SFAS 109, Accounting for Income Taxes, as of January 1,
1993. SFAS 109 established new principles for calculating and reporting the
effects of income taxes in financial statements. SFAS 109 replaced the income
statement orientation inherent in APB Opinion 11 with a balance sheet approach.
Under the new approach, deferred tax assets and liabilities are generally
determined based on the difference between the financial statement and tax bases
of assets and liabilities using enacted tax rates in effect for the year in
which the differences are expected to reverse. Under SFAS 109, the effect on
deferred tax assets and liabilities of a change in tax rates is recognized in
income in the period that includes the enactment date. SFAS 109 allows
recognition of deferred tax assets if future realization of the tax benefit is
more likely than not, with a valuation allowance for the portion that is not
likely to be realized.
 
The implementation of SFAS 109 resulted in a one-time increase to earnings of
$2.4 million in the first quarter of 1993. Prior years' financial statements
have not been restated to apply the provisions of SFAS 109.
 
Upon adoption of SFAS 109, a valuation allowance was established to reduce the
deferred federal tax asset related to real estate and other investments to the
amount that, based upon available evidence, is, in management's judgment, more
likely than not to be realized. Any reversals of the valuation allowance are
contingent upon the recognition of future capital gains in Kemper's federal
income tax return or a change in circumstances which causes the recognition of
the benefits to become more likely than not. During 1994, the valuation
allowance was increased by $85.3 million. This increase in the valuation
allowance is solely attributable to the decrease in the net deferred federal tax
liability from unrealized losses on investments.
 
                                      B-36
<PAGE>   98
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(6) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)

The tax effects of temporary differences that give rise to significant portions
of the Company's net deferred federal tax liability were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                DECEMBER 31,
                                                                          ------------------------
(in thousands)                                                             1994            1993
                                                                          ---------       --------
<S>                                                                       <C>             <C>
Deferred federal tax assets:
  Unrealized losses on investments......................................  $  85,331       $     --
  Life policy reserves..................................................     51,519         60,446
  Real estate-related...................................................     39,360         45,851
  Other investment-related..............................................      7,435         12,498
  Other.................................................................      6,415          5,804
                                                                          ---------       --------
     Total deferred federal tax assets..................................    190,060        124,599
  Valuation allowance...................................................   (100,532)       (15,201)
                                                                          ---------       --------
     Total deferred federal tax assets after valuation allowance........     89,528        109,398
                                                                          ---------       --------
Deferred federal tax liabilities:
  Deferred insurance acquisition costs..................................    108,663        100,834
  Unrealized gains on investments.......................................         --         49,193
  Depreciation and amortization.........................................     18,878         21,367
  Other.................................................................      3,351          2,049
                                                                          ---------       --------
     Total deferred federal tax liabilities.............................    130,892        173,443
                                                                          ---------       --------
Net deferred federal tax liabilities....................................  $ (41,364)      $(64,045)
                                                                          =========       ========
</TABLE>
 
The valuation allowance of $100.5 million is subject to future adjustments based
on, among other items, Kemper's estimates of future operating earnings and
capital gains.
 
Pursuant to the deferred method under APB Opinion 11, deferred income taxes were
recognized for income and expense items that were reported in different years
for financial reporting purposes and income tax purposes using the tax rate
applicable for the year of the calculation. Under the deferred method, deferred
taxes were not adjusted for subsequent changes in tax rates.
 
The sources of deferred tax expense (benefit) and their tax effect were as
follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(in thousands)                                                                             1992
                                                                                         --------
<S>                                                                                      <C>
Deferred insurance acquisition costs..................................................   $  6,172
Future policy benefit reserves tax adjustment.........................................      5,692
Timing differences in recognition of accrued liabilities for GAAP and tax purposes....       (397)
Tax versus GAAP separate account gain.................................................     (3,277)
Tax versus GAAP capital losses........................................................      4,350
GAAP versus tax investment income on bonds............................................     (4,380)
Joint venture partnership income adjustments..........................................      1,491
Leasing transactions..................................................................      2,567
Change in real estate reserve.........................................................    (21,305)
Tax capitalization of policy acquisition costs........................................        555
Tax versus GAAP depreciation..........................................................        490
Unutilized capital losses.............................................................      8,286
Other, net............................................................................     (4,517)
                                                                                         --------
          Total.......................................................................   $ (4,273)
                                                                                         ========
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-37
<PAGE>   99
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(6) INCOME TAXES (CONTINUED)

The tax returns through the year 1986 have been examined by the Internal Revenue
Service ("IRS"). Changes proposed are not material to the Company's financial
position. The tax returns for the years 1987 through 1990 are currently under
examination by the IRS.
 
(7) RELATED-PARTY TRANSACTIONS
 
The Company received cash capital contributions from KFC of $82.5 million, $90.0
million and $30.0 million during 1994, 1993 and 1992, respectively.
 
In 1994 and 1993, the Company transferred the majority of its deficit equity
ownership interest in two limited partnerships to KFC resulting in an increase
of the Company's additional paid-in capital of $71 thousand and $9.2 million,
respectively. The Company also paid a non-cash dividend of $530 thousand to KFC
in December 1993, which represented the positive equity ownership interests of
the majority of one of its limited partnerships. Net losses associated with the
Company's ownership interests in these limited partnerships amounted to $1.4
million, $5.4 million and $3.9 million in 1994, 1993 and 1992, respectively, and
are included in the Company's consolidated statement of operations.
 
The Company has loans to joint ventures, consisting primarily of mortgage loans
on real estate, in which the Company and/or one of its affiliates has an
ownership interest. At December 31, 1994 and 1993, joint venture mortgage loans
totaled $351 million and $731 million, respectively, and during 1994, 1993 and
1992, the Company earned interest income on these joint venture loans of $22.0
million, $63.1 million and $116.3 million, respectively.
 
As of January 1, 1993, all of the Company's personnel are employees of Federal
Kemper Life Assurance Company ("FKLA"), an affiliated company. Prior to January
1, 1993, the majority of the Company's personnel were employees of another
affiliated company, Kemper Financial Services, Inc. ("KFS"). The Company is
allocated expenses for the utilization of KFS and FKLA employees and facilities
and the information systems of Kemper Service Company ("KSvC") based on the
Company's share of administrative, legal, marketing, investment management,
information systems and operation and support services. During 1994, 1993 and
1992, expenses allocated to the Company from KFS and KSvC amounted to $6.5
million, $3.1 million and $28.2 million, respectively. The Company also paid to
KFS investment management fees of $6.0 million, $6.7 million and $5.9 million
during 1994, 1993 and 1992, respectively. The Company paid Kemper Sales Company
$7.1 million in 1992 for services relating to the distribution of the Company's
products. In addition, expenses allocated to the Company from FKLA during 1994,
1993 and 1992 amounted to $11.1 million, $13.1 million and $1.1 million,
respectively.
 
During 1994, 1993 and 1992, the Company sold certain mortgages and real
estate-related investments, net of reserves, amounting to approximately $154.0
million, $343.7 million and $144.8 million respectively, to KFC Portfolio Corp.,
an affiliated non-life realty company, in exchange for cash. No gain or loss was
recognized on the sales.
 
(8) REINSURANCE
 
In the ordinary course of business, the Company enters into reinsurance
agreements to diversify risk and limit its overall financial exposure to certain
blocks of fixed-rate annuities. The Company generally cedes 100 percent of the
related annuity liabilities under the terms of the reinsurance agreements.
Although these reinsurance agreements contractually obligate the reinsurers to
reimburse the Company, they do not discharge the Company from its primary
liabilities and obligations to policyholders. As such, these amounts paid or
deemed to have been paid are recorded on the Company's consolidated balance
sheet as reinsurance recoverables and ceded future policy benefits.
 
In 1992 and 1991, the Company entered into 100 percent indemnity reinsurance
agreements ceding $515.7 million and $416.3 million, respectively, of its
fixed-rate annuity liabilities to FLA. FLA is a mutual insurance company that
shares common management with the Company and FKLA and certain common board
members with the Company and Kemper. The 1992 reinsurance agreement resulted in
the sale to FLA of approximately $500 million of certain assets, including $151
million of mortgage loans, while the 1992 agreement was all cash. As of
 
                                      B-38
<PAGE>   100
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(8) REINSURANCE (CONTINUED)

December 31, 1994, the reinsurance recoverable related to the fixed-rate annuity
liabilities ceded to FLA amounted to approximately $643 million.
 
(9) POSTRETIREMENT BENEFITS OTHER THAN PENSIONS
 
The Company and FKLA sponsor a welfare plan that provides medical and life
insurance benefits to their retired and active employees and the Company is
allocated a portion of the costs of providing such benefits. The Company is self
insured with respect to medical benefits, and the plan is not funded except with
respect to certain disability-related medical claims. The medical plan provides
for medical insurance benefits at retirement, with eligibility based upon age
and the participant's number of years of participation attained at retirement.
The plan is contributory for pre-Medicare retirees, and will be contributory for
all retiree coverage for most current employees, with contributions generally
adjusted annually. Postretirement life insurance benefits are noncontributory
and are limited to $10,000 per participant.
 
The discount rate used in determining the allocated postretirement benefit
obligation was 8 percent and 7 percent for 1994 and 1993, respectively. The
assumed health care trend rate used was based on projected experience for 1994
and 1995, 10 percent in 1996, gradually declining to 6 percent by the year 1999
and remaining at that level thereafter.
 
The status of the plan as of December 31, 1994 and 1993, was as follows:
 
Accumulated postretirement benefit obligation:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

(in thousands)                                                                       1994     1993
                                                                                     ----     ----
<S>                                                                                  <C>      <C>
Retirees..........................................................................   $206     $171
Fully eligible active plan participants...........................................     58       90
Other active plan participants....................................................    101      159
Unrecognized gain from actuarial experience.......................................    314      223
                                                                                     ----     ----
          Accrued liability.......................................................   $679     $643
                                                                                     ====     ==== 
</TABLE>

Components of the net periodic postretirement benefit cost:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

(in thousands)                                                                       1994     1993
                                                                                     ----     ----
<S>                                                                                  <C>      <C>
Service cost-benefits attributed to service during the period.....................   $ 31     $ 84
Interest cost on accumulated postretirement benefit obligations...................     43       41
Amortization of unrecognized actuarial gain.......................................    (35)      --
                                                                                     ----     ----
          Total...................................................................   $ 39     $125
                                                                                     ====     ==== 
</TABLE>
 
A one percentage point increase in the assumed health care cost trend rate for
each year would increase the accumulated postretirement benefit obligation as of
December 31, 1994 and 1993 by $48 thousand and $69 thousand, respectively, and
the net postretirement health care interest and service costs for the years
ended December 31, 1994 and 1993 by $14 thousand and $19 thousand, respectively.
 
During 1994, the Company adopted certain severance-related policies to provide
benefits, generally limited in time, to former or inactive employees after
employment but before retirement. The effect of adopting these policies was
immaterial.
 
(10) COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
 
The Company is involved in various legal actions for which it establishes
liabilities where appropriate. In the opinion of the Company's management, based
upon the advice of legal counsel, the resolution of such litigation is not
expected to have a material adverse effect on the consolidated financial
statements.
 
Although none of the Company or its joint venture projects have been identified
as a "potentially responsible party" under federal environmental guidelines,
inherent in the ownership of or lending to real estate projects is the
possibility that environmental pollution conditions may exist on or near or
relate to properties owned or previously owned on properties securing loans.
Where the Company has presently identified remediation costs, they have been
 
                                      B-39
<PAGE>   101
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(10) COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENT LIABILITIES (CONTINUED)

taken into account in determining the cash flows and resulting valuations of the
related real estate assets. Based on the Company's receipt and review of
environmental reports on most of the projects in which it is involved, the
Company believes its environmental exposure would be immaterial to its
consolidated results of operations. However, the Company may be required in the
future to take actions to remedy environmental exposures, and there can be no
assurance that material environmental exposures will not develop or be
identified in the future. The amount of future environmental costs is impossible
to estimate due to, among other factors, the unknown magnitude of possible
exposures, the unknown timing and extent of corrective actions that may be
required, the determination of the Company's liability in proportion to others
and the extent such costs may be covered by insurance or various environmental
indemnification agreements.
 
See the note captioned "Financial Instruments--Off-Balance-Sheet Risk" below for
the discussion regarding the Company's loan commitments and standby financing
agreements.
 
The Company is liable for guaranty fund assessments related to certain
unaffiliated insurance companies that have become insolvent during the years
1994 and prior. The Company's financial statements include provisions for all
known assessments that will be levied against the Company as well as an estimate
of amounts (net of estimated future premium tax recoveries) that the Company
believes it will be assessed in the future for which the life insurance industry
has estimated the cost to cover losses to policyholders. The Company is also
contingently liable for any future guaranty fund assessments related to
insolvencies of unaffiliated insurance companies, for which the life insurance
industry has been unable to estimate the cost to cover losses to policyholders.
No specific amount can be reasonably estimated for such insolvencies as of
December 31, 1994.
 
(11) FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS--OFF BALANCE-SHEET RISK
 
The Company has continued to fund both existing projects and legal commitments.
At December 31, 1994, the Company had future legal loan commitments and stand-by
financing agreements totaling $376.1 million to support the financing needs of
various real estate investments. To the extent these arrangements are called
upon, amounts loaned would be secured by assets of the joint ventures, including
first mortgage liens on the real estate. The Company's criteria in making these
arrangements are the same as for its mortgage loans and other real estate
investments. The Company presently expects to fund approximately $96.5 million
of these arrangements, along with providing capital to existing projects. The
total legal commitments, along with estimated working capital requirements are
considered in the Company's analysis of real estate-related reserves and
write-downs. The disparity between total legal commitments and the amount
expected to be funded relates principally to standby financing arrangements that
provide credit enhancements to certain tax-exempt bonds, which the Company does
not presently expect to fund. The fair values of loan commitments and standby
financing agreements are estimated in conjunction with and using the same
methodology as the fair value estimates of mortgage loans and other real
estate-related investments.
 
(12) DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
The Company is party to derivative financial instruments in the normal course of
business for other than trading purposes to hedge exposures in foreign currency
fluctuations related to certain foreign fixed maturity securities held by the
Company. The following table summarizes various information regarding these
derivative financial instruments as of December 31, 1994 and 1993:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                        WEIGHTED
                                                                                                           WEIGHTED      AVERAGE
(in thousands)                                                                                             AVERAGE      REPRICING
                                                                    NOTIONAL    CARRYING    ESTIMATED      YEARS TO     FREQUENCY
1994                                                                 AMOUNT      VALUE      FAIR VALUE    EXPIRATION     (DAYS)
----                                                                --------    --------    ----------    ----------    ---------
<S>                                                                 <C>         <C>         <C>           <C>           <C>
Non-trading foreign exchange forward options.....................   $ 34,541     $   18       $   18          .25           30

1993
----                                                             
Non-trading foreign exchange forward options.....................     69,241      2,194        2,194          .22           30
</TABLE>
 
The Company's hedges relating to foreign currency exposure are implemented using
forward contracts on foreign currencies. These are generally short duration
contracts with U.S. money-center banks. The Company records realized and
unrealized gains and losses on such investments in net income on a current
basis. The amounts of gain
 
                                      B-40
<PAGE>   102
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(12) DERIVATIVE FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (CONTINUED)

(loss) included in net income during 1994, 1993 and 1992 totaled $6.4 million,
$(2.8) million and $(2.4) million, respectively.
 
(13) FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
Fair value disclosures are required under SFAS 107. Such fair value estimates
are made at specific points in time, based on relevant market information and
information about the financial instrument. These estimates do not reflect any
premium or discount that could result from offering for sale at one time the
Company's entire holdings of a particular financial instrument. A significant
portion of the Company's financial instruments are carried at fair value. (See
the note captioned "Invested Assets and Related Income" on page B-27.) Fair
value estimates for financial instruments not carried at fair value are
generally determined using discounted cash flow models and assumptions that are
based on judgments regarding current and future economic conditions and the risk
characteristics of the investments. Although fair value estimates are calculated
using assumptions that management believes are appropriate, changes in
assumptions could significantly affect the estimates and such estimates should
be used with care.
 
Fair value estimates are determined for existing on- and off-balance sheet
financial instruments without attempting to estimate the value of anticipated
future business and the value of assets and certain liabilities that are not
considered financial instruments. Accordingly, the aggregate fair value
estimates presented do not represent the underlying value of the Company. For
example, the Company's subsidiaries are not considered financial instruments,
and their value has not been incorporated into the fair value estimates. In
addition, tax ramifications related to the realization of unrealized gains and
losses can have a significant effect on fair value estimates and have not been
considered in any of the estimates.
 
The following methods and assumptions were used by the Company in estimating the
fair value of its financial instruments:
 
Fixed maturities: Fair values for fixed maturity securities carried at market
value were determined by using market quotations, or independent pricing
services that use prices provided by market makers or estimates of market values
obtained from yield data relating to instruments or securities with similar
characteristics, or fair value as determined in good faith by the Company's
portfolio manager, Kemper Financial Services, Inc.
 
Equity securities: Fair values for equity securities were based upon quoted
market prices.
 
Cash and short-term investments: The carrying amounts reported in the
consolidated balance sheet for these instruments approximate fair values.
 
Mortgage loans and other real estate-related investments: Fair values for
mortgage loans and other real estate-related investments were estimated on a
project-by-project basis. Generally, the projected cash flows of the collateral
are discounted using a discount rate of 10 to 12 percent. The resulting
collateral estimates were then used to determine the value of the Company's real
estate-related investments. The estimate of fair value should be used with care
given the inherent difficulty of estimating the fair value of real estate due to
the lack of a liquid quotable market.
 
Other loans and investments: The carrying amounts reported in the consolidated
balance sheet for these instruments approximate fair values. The fair values of
policy loans were estimated by discounting the expected future cash flows using
an interest rate charged on policy loans for similar policies currently being
issued.
 
Life policy benefits: Fair values of the life policy benefits regarding
investment contracts (primarily deferred annuities) and universal life contracts
were estimated by discounting gross benefit payments, net of contractual
premiums, using the average crediting rate currently being offered in the
marketplace for similar contracts with maturities consistent with those
remaining for the contracts being valued. The Company had projected its future
average crediting rate in 1994 and 1993 to be 5.5 percent and 5.0 percent,
respectively, while the assumed average market crediting rate was 6.5 percent in
1994 and 5.25 percent in 1993.
 
                                      B-41
<PAGE>   103
 
            KEMPER INVESTORS LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY AND SUBSIDIARIES
 
                   NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
(13) FAIR VALUE OF FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS (CONTINUED)

The carrying values and estimated fair values of the Company's financial
instruments at December 31, 1994 and 1993 were as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       DECEMBER 31
                                                  -----------------------------------------------------
                                                            1994                         1993
                                                  ------------------------     ------------------------
                                                   CARRYING        FAIR         CARRYING        FAIR
(in thousands)                                      VALUE         VALUE          VALUE         VALUE
                                                  ----------    ----------     ----------    ----------
<S>                                               <C>           <C>            <C>           <C>
Financial instruments recorded as assets:
  Fixed maturities(1)..........................   $3,463,732    $3,463,732     $3,441,224    $3,441,224
  Equity securities............................       14,767        14,767         67,700        67,700
  Cash and short-term investments..............      227,353       227,353        409,950       409,950
  Mortgage loans and other real estate-related
     assets....................................      907,283       804,867      1,154,404     1,010,038
  Policy loans.................................      277,743       277,743        264,112       264,112
  Other invested assets........................       25,760        25,760         43,267        43,267
Financial instruments recorded as liabilities:
  Life policy benefits.........................    4,843,690     4,709,561      5,040,002     5,120,000
</TABLE>
 
---------------
(1) Includes $18 and $2,200 carrying value and fair value for 1994 and 1993,
    respectively, of derivative securities used to hedge the foreign currency
    exposure on certain specific foreign fixed maturity investments.
 
(14) STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY--RETAINED EARNINGS
 
The maximum amount of dividends which can be paid by insurance companies
domiciled in the State of Illinois to shareholders without prior approval of
regulatory authorities is restricted if such dividend, together with other
distributions during the twelve preceding months would exceed the greater of ten
percent of statutory surplus as regards policyholders as of the preceding
December 31, or statutory net income for the preceding calendar year, then such
proposed dividend must be reported to the Director of Insurance at least 30 days
prior to the proposed payment date and may be paid only if not disapproved.
Illinois insurance laws also permit payment of dividends only out of earned
surplus, exclusive of most unrealized capital gains. The maximum amount of
dividends which can be paid by the Company in 1995 is currently $0. The Company
paid no cash dividends in 1994, 1993 or 1992.
 
The Company's net income (loss) and stockholder's equity as determined in
accordance with statutory accounting principles are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
(in thousands)                                                     1994         1993         1992
                                                                 --------     --------     ---------
<S>                                                              <C>          <C>          <C>
Net income (loss).............................................   $ 44,491     $(36,178)    $(141,975)
                                                                 ========     ========     =========
Statutory surplus.............................................   $416,243     $329,430     $ 251,283
                                                                 ========     ========     =========
</TABLE>
 
                                      B-42
<PAGE>   104
 
APPENDIX B
 
STATE PREMIUM TAX CHART
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  Rate of Tax
                                                                        --------------------------------
                                                                        Qualified          Non-Qualified
              State                                                       Plans                Plans
              -----                                                       -----                -----
    <S>                                                                 <C>                  <C>
    California......................................................      .50%                2.35%*
    District of Columbia............................................     2.25%                2.25%*
    Kansas..........................................................       --                 2.00%*
    Kentucky........................................................     2.00%*               2.00%*
    Maine...........................................................       --                 2.00%
    Mississippi.....................................................       --                 1.00%
    Nevada..........................................................       --                 3.50%*
    Pennsylvania....................................................       --                 2.00%
    South Dakota....................................................       --                 1.25%
    West Virginia...................................................     1.00%                1.00%
    Wyoming.........................................................       --                 1.00%
</TABLE>
 
     * Taxes become due when annuity benefits commence, rather than when the
       premiums are collected. At the time of annuitization, the premium tax
       payable will be charged against the Contract Value.
 
                                      B-43


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